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Dosage compensation

About: Dosage compensation is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 1920 publications have been published within this topic receiving 124589 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A PCR-based X chromosome inactivation assay was fully concordant with Southern blotting methylation analyses at the PGK locus and provides a rapid and informative method in tumour clonality analysis and carrier detection in X-linked diseases.
Abstract: A CpG island has been identified just upstream of the first exon of the human monoamine oxidase A (MAOA) gene, localized to Xp11.4-Xp11.23. Southern blotting following digestion with the methylation sensitive restriction endonucleases SmaI, HpaII and HhaI, indicated that CpG dinucleotides within the CpG island were unmethylated on the active X chromosome and extensively methylated on the inactive X chromosome. These sites of differential methylation were close to a polymorphic GT-dinucleotide/VNTR region, which is located 1 kb 3' of the first exon and has a heterozygosity value of 75%. PCR primers were designed for amplification of 1.2-1.3 kb DNA fragments, encompassing both the hypervariable region and a cluster of six HpaII sites within the CpG-rich region. Cleavage of HpaII sites was found to be restricted to active X chromosomes. Therefore, following HpaII digestion, DNA fragments were exclusively amplified from inactive X chromosomes. The resulting PCR products were digested with SacI, which reduced the size of the DNA fragments containing the hypervariable region to 230-330 bp, and were subsequently analyzed on denaturating polyacrylamide gels. Because amplified fragments were exclusively derived from the inactive X chromosome, the relative densities of the two allelic fragments should reflect the proportions of cells that have either of the two X chromosome inactivated. The results of this PCR-based X chromosome inactivation assay were fully concordant with Southern blotting methylation analyses at the PGK locus. It therefore provides a rapid and informative method in tumour clonality analysis and carrier detection in X-linked diseases.

55 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Newly formed X chromosomes are not passive players in the evolutionary process of sex chromosome differentiation, but respond adaptively to both their sex-biased transmission and to Y chromosome degeneration, possibly through demasculinization of their gene content and the evolution of dosage compensation.
Abstract: Sex chromosomes originated from ordinary autosomes, and their evolution is characterized by continuous gene loss from the ancestral Y chromosome. Here, we document a new feature of sex chromosome evolution: bursts of adaptive fixations on a newly formed X chromosome. Taking advantage of the recently formed neo-X chromosome of Drosophila miranda, we compare patterns of DNA sequence variation at genes located on the neo-X to genes on the ancestral X chromosome. This contrast allows us to draw inferences of selection on a newly formed X chromosome relative to background levels of adaptation in the genome while controlling for demographic effects. Chromosome-wide synonymous diversity on the neo-X is reduced 2-fold relative to the ancestral X, as expected under recent and recurrent directional selection. Several statistical tests employing various features of the data consistently identify 10%-15% of neo-X genes as targets of recent adaptive evolution but only 1%-3% of genes on the ancestral X. In addition, both the rate of adaptation and the fitness effects of adaptive substitutions are estimated to be roughly an order of magnitude higher for neo-X genes relative to genes on the ancestral X. Thus, newly formed X chromosomes are not passive players in the evolutionary process of sex chromosome differentiation, but respond adaptively to both their sex-biased transmission and to Y chromosome degeneration, possibly through demasculinization of their gene content and the evolution of dosage compensation.

55 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is proposed that the basic region may mediate DNA binding and that the glycine-rich region may promote the association of MSL complexes to closely adjacent sites on the X chromosome.
Abstract: In Drosophila melanogaster, X chromosome dosage compensation is achieved by doubling the transcription of most X-linked genes. The male-specific lethal (MSL) complex is required for this process and binds to hundreds of sites on the male X chromosome. The MSL1 protein is essential for X chromosome binding and serves as a central scaffold for MSL complex assembly. We find that the amino-terminal region of MSL1 binds to hundreds of sites on the X chromosome in normal males but only to approximately 30 high-affinity sites in the absence of endogenous MSL1. Binding to the high-affinity sites requires a basic motif at the amino terminus that is conserved among Drosophila species. X chromosome binding also requires a conserved leucine zipper-like motif that binds to MSL2. A glycine-rich motif between the basic and leucine-zipper-like motifs mediates MSL1 self-association in vitro and binding of the amino-terminal region of MSL1 to the MSL complex assembled on the male X chromosome. We propose that the basic region may mediate DNA binding and that the glycine-rich region may promote the association of MSL complexes to closely adjacent sites on the X chromosome.

55 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: An analysis of sex chromosome dosage compensation in Heliconius butterflies, sampling multiple individuals for several different adult tissues and introducing a novel application of linear mixed-effects models to assess dosage compensation, showing substantially reduced Z-linked expression relative to autosomes in both sexes.
Abstract: The evolution of heterogametic sex chromosomes is often—but not always—accompanied by the evolution of dosage compensating mechanisms that mitigate the impact of sex-specific gene dosage on levels of gene expression. One emerging view of this process is that such mechanisms may only evolve in male-heterogametic (XY) species but not in female-heterogametic (ZW) species, which will consequently exhibit “incomplete” sex chromosome dosage compensation. However, recent results suggest that at least some Lepidoptera (moths and butterflies) may prove to be an exception to this prediction. Studies in bombycoid moths indicate the presence of a chromosome-wide epigenetic mechanism that effectively balances Z chromosome gene expression between the sexes by reducing Z-linked expression in males. In contrast, strong sex chromosome dosage effects without any reduction in male Z-linked expression were previously reported in a pyralid moth, suggesting a lack of any such dosage compensating mechanism. Here we report an analysis of sex chromosome dosage compensation in Heliconius butterflies, sampling multiple individuals for several different adult tissues (head, abdomen, leg, mouth, and antennae). Methodologically, we introduce a novel application of linear mixed-effects models to assess dosage compensation, offering a unified statistical framework that can estimate effects specific to chromosome, to sex, and their interactions (i.e., a dosage effect). Our results show substantially reduced Z-linked expression relative to autosomes in both sexes, as previously observed in bombycoid moths. This observation is consistent with an increasing body of evidence that some lepidopteran species possess an epigenetic dosage compensating mechanism that reduces Z chromosome expression in males to levels comparable with females. However, this mechanism appears to be imperfect in Heliconius, resulting in a modest dosage effect that produces an average 5–20% increase in male expression relative to females on the Z chromosome, depending on the tissue. Thus our results in Heliconius reflect a mixture of previous patterns reported for Lepidoptera. In Heliconius, a moderate pattern of incomplete dosage compensation persists apparently despite the presence of an epigenetic dosage compensating mechanism. The chromosomal distributions of sex-biased genes show an excess of male-biased and a dearth of female-biased genes on the Z chromosome relative to autosomes, consistent with predictions of sexually antagonistic evolution.

55 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The origin and function of buffering and compensation using Drosophila as a model is discussed and three known compensatory mechanisms have evolved: a general segmental aneuploidy-buffering system and two chromosome-specific systems.
Abstract: Copy number variation (CNV) in terms of aneuploidies of both entire chromosomes and chromosomal segments is an important evolutionary driving force, but it is inevitably accompanied by potentially problematic variations in gene doses and genomic instability. Thus, a delicate balance must be maintained between mechanisms that compensate for variations in gene doses (and thus allow such genomic variability) and selection against destabilizing CNVs. In Drosophila, three known compensatory mechanisms have evolved: a general segmental aneuploidy-buffering system and two chromosome-specific systems. The two chromosome-specific systems are the male-specific lethal complex, which is important for dosage compensation of the male X chromosome, and Painting of fourth, which stimulates expression of the fourth chromosome. In this review, we discuss the origin and function of buffering and compensation using Drosophila as a model.

55 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202330
202272
202183
202051
201980
201870