Abstract

Dosage compensation is a mechanism that equalizes sex chromosome gene expression between the sexes. In Drosophila, individuals with two X chromosomes (XX) become female, whereas males have one X chromosome (XY). In males, dosage compensation of the X chromosome in the soma is achieved by five proteins and two non-coding RNAs, which assemble into the male-specific lethal (MSL) complex to upregulate X-linked genes twofold. By contrast, it remains unclear whether dosage compensation occurs in the germline. To address this issue, we performed transcriptome analysis of male and female primordial germ cells (PGCs). We found that the expression levels of X-linked genes were approximately twofold higher in female PGCs than in male PGCs. Acetylation of lysine residue 16 on histone H4 (H4K16ac), which is catalyzed by the MSL complex, was undetectable in these cells. In male PGCs, hyperactivation of X-linked genes and H4K16ac were induced by overexpression of the essential components of the MSL complex, which were expressed at very low levels in PGCs. Together, these findings indicate that failure of MSL complex formation results in the absence of X-chromosome dosage compensation in male PGCs.

Highlights

  • Dosage compensation is a mechanism that equalizes sex chromosome gene expression between the sexes

  • We focused on primordial germ cells (PGCs) in embryos, as dosage compensation is linked with sex determination and is an early event in the soma that differs between the s­ exes[3,6,15,16]

  • DNA spanning from the 5′ terminus of the GAGA-binding site to the 3′ terminus of K10, which contains the msl-1 open reading frames (ORFs), was amplified using primers pUASp-K10-attBFw/ pUASp-K10-attBRv (Table S1), and the amplicon was cloned into PsiI-digested pUASp-K10-attB containing the msl-2 ORF

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Summary

Introduction

Dosage compensation is a mechanism that equalizes sex chromosome gene expression between the sexes. In the somatic cells of Drosophila males, expression of X-linked genes is upregulated twofold by the dosage compensation m­ echanism[3].

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