» Articles » PMID: 7796814

Male-specific Lethal 2, a Dosage Compensation Gene of Drosophila, Undergoes Sex-specific Regulation and Encodes a Protein with a RING Finger and a Metallothionein-like Cysteine Cluster

Overview
Journal EMBO J
Date 1995 Jun 15
PMID 7796814
Citations 74
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

In Drosophila the equalization of X-linked gene products between males and females, i.e. dosage compensation, is the result of a 2-fold hypertranscription of most of these genes in males. At least four regulatory genes are required for this process. Three of these genes, maleless (mle), male-specific lethal 1 (msl-1) and male-specific lethal 3 (msl-3), have been cloned and their products have been shown to interact and to bind to numerous sites on the X chromosome of males, but not of females. Although binding to the X chromosome is negatively correlated with the function of the master regulatory gene Sex lethal (Sxl), the mechanisms that restrict this binding to males and to the X chromosome are not yet understood. We have cloned the last of the known autosomal genes involved in dosage compensation, male-specific lethal 2 (msl-2), and characterized its product. The encoded protein (MSL-2) consists of 769 amino acid residues and has a RING finger (C3HC4 zinc finger) and a metallothionein-like domain with eight conserved and two non-conserved cysteines. In addition, it contains a positively and a negatively charged amino acid residue cluster and a coiled coil domain that may be involved in protein-protein interactions. Males produce a msl-2 transcript that is shorter than in females, due to differential splicing of an intron of 132 bases in the untranslated leader. Using an antiserum against MSL-2 we have shown that the protein is expressed at a detectable level only in males, where it is physically associated with the X chromosome. Our observations suggest that MSL-2 may be the target of the master regulatory gene Sxl and provide the basic elements of a working hypothesis on the function of MSL-2 in mediating the 2-fold increase in transcription that is characteristic of dosage compensation.

Citing Articles

N-terminus of MSL1 is critical for dosage compensation.

Babosha V, Klimenko N, Revel-Muroz A, Tikhonova E, Georgiev P, Maksimenko O Elife. 2024; 13.

PMID: 39699942 PMC: 11658772. DOI: 10.7554/eLife.93241.


Y-Linked Copy Number Polymorphism of Target of Rapamycin Is Associated with Sexual Size Dimorphism in Seed Beetles.

Kaufmann P, Wiberg R, Papachristos K, Scofield D, Tellgren-Roth C, Immonen E Mol Biol Evol. 2023; 40(8).

PMID: 37479678 PMC: 10414808. DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msad167.


The Nab2 RNA binding protein inhibits mA methylation and male-specific splicing of transcript in female neuronal tissue.

Jalloh B, Lancaster C, Rounds J, Brown B, Leung S, Banerjee A Elife. 2023; 12.

PMID: 37458420 PMC: 10351920. DOI: 10.7554/eLife.64904.


Dosage Compensation in : Its Canonical and Non-Canonical Mechanisms.

Shevelyov Y, Ulianov S, Gelfand M, Belyakin S, Razin S Int J Mol Sci. 2022; 23(18).

PMID: 36142884 PMC: 9506574. DOI: 10.3390/ijms231810976.


Structural basis for interaction between CLAMP and MSL2 proteins involved in the specific recruitment of the dosage compensation complex in Drosophila.

Tikhonova E, Mariasina S, Efimov S, Polshakov V, Maksimenko O, Georgiev P Nucleic Acids Res. 2022; 50(11):6521-6531.

PMID: 35648444 PMC: 9226498. DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkac455.


References
1.
Altschul S, Gish W, Miller W, Myers E, Lipman D . Basic local alignment search tool. J Mol Biol. 1990; 215(3):403-10. DOI: 10.1016/S0022-2836(05)80360-2. View

2.
Vallee B, Coleman J, Auld D . Zinc fingers, zinc clusters, and zinc twists in DNA-binding protein domains. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1991; 88(3):999-1003. PMC: 50942. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.88.3.999. View

3.
Zeng J, Heuchel R, Schaffner W, KAGI J . Thionein (apometallothionein) can modulate DNA binding and transcription activation by zinc finger containing factor Sp1. FEBS Lett. 1991; 279(2):310-2. DOI: 10.1016/0014-5793(91)80175-3. View

4.
Schuler G, Altschul S, Lipman D . A workbench for multiple alignment construction and analysis. Proteins. 1991; 9(3):180-90. DOI: 10.1002/prot.340090304. View

5.
Bell L, Horabin J, Schedl P, Cline T . Positive autoregulation of sex-lethal by alternative splicing maintains the female determined state in Drosophila. Cell. 1991; 65(2):229-39. DOI: 10.1016/0092-8674(91)90157-t. View