| Literature DB >> 34943924 |
Reem Makki1, Victoria H Meller1.
Abstract
Organisms with highly differentiated sex chromosomes face an imbalance in X-linked gene dosage. Male Drosophila solve this problem by increasing expression from virtually every gene on their single X chromosome, a process known as dosage compensation. This involves a ribonucleoprotein complex that is recruited to active, X-linked genes to remodel chromatin and increase expression. Interestingly, the male X chromosome is also enriched for several proteins associated with heterochromatin. Furthermore, the polytenized male X is selectively disrupted by the loss of factors involved in repression, silencing, heterochromatin formation or chromatin remodeling. Mutations in many of these factors preferentially reduce male survival or enhance the lethality of mutations that prevent normal recognition of the X chromosome. The involvement of primarily repressive factors in a process that elevates expression has long been puzzling. Interestingly, recent work suggests that the siRNA pathway, often associated with heterochromatin formation and repression, also helps the dosage compensation machinery identify the X chromosome. In light of this finding, we revisit the evidence that links nuclear organization and heterochromatin to regulation of the male X chromosome.Entities:
Keywords: dosage compensation; heterochromatin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34943924 PMCID: PMC8700316 DOI: 10.3390/cells10123416
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1Dosage compensation in Drosophila equalizes sex chromosome expression between males and females. (A) Drosophila males have one X chromosome while females have two. Males increase transcription from their X-linked genes approximately two-fold to equalize expression. (B) The Male Specific Lethal (MSL) complex, composed of five proteins and a long non-coding RNA, is recruited to CLAMP-bound Chromatin Entry Sites (red) on the X chromosome. The MSL complex then spreads in cis to nearby transcribed genes by recognition of active chromatin marks. (C) Polytene chromosome preparation from a wild type male. MSL2, detected by Texas Red, identifies the X chromosome. DNA is counterstained with DAPI (blue).
Genes that preferentially disrupt the male X chromosome or interact genetically with roX1 roX2. Genes are grouped by macromolecular complex or molecular process. Many of these are primarily associated with heterochromatin. Mutations that enhance the roX1 roX2 phenotype are often in genes necessary for siRNA production or in the RITS effector complex.
| Complex or Process | Gene | Functions | Mutant Phenotype | Citations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Small RNA production or action | Ago2 | siRNA slicer nuclease | Enhances | [ |
| Rm62 | RNA helicase, RNA processing | [ | ||
| Dcr1 | Small RNA processing | [ | ||
| Dcr2 | Small RNA processing | [ | ||
| Fmr1 | RNA-binding, translational regulation | [ | ||
| Elp1 | RNAPII elongation, binds Ago2 Dcr-1,-2 | [ | ||
| Loqs | dsRNA-binding, siRNA processing | [ | ||
| vig | Interacts with Ago1, Ago2 and HP1a | [ | ||
| barr | Interacts with Ago2 and spn-E | [ | ||
| Smg | RNA-binding, translation, mRNA stability, miRNA production | [ | ||
| Heterochromatin | Su(var)3-9 | H3K9 methyltransferaseHeterochromatin formation | Polytenized male X disorganized | [ |
| Su(var)3-7 | Heterochromatin formation | [ | ||
| HP1a | H3K9me2/3 binding | Polytenized male X disorganized | [ | |
| NURF complex | ISWI | ATP-dependent nucleosome remodeler | Polytenized male X disorganized | [ |
| Nurf301 | Nucleosome remodeling | Polytenized male X disorganized | [ | |
| ATAC complex | Gcn5 | Histone acetyltransferase | Polytenized male X disorganized | [ |
| Ada2a | Chromatin binding | [ | ||
| Limit compensation | Ocm | Polycomb group interactions | Suppresses | [ |
| Mtor | Nuclear pore subunit | [ | ||
| Misc. | JIL-1 | Dual kinase, boundary elementEnriched on male X chromosome | Polytenized male X disorganized | [ |
| upSET | Maintains heterochromatin | Enhances | [ |
Figure 2Genes that participate in heterochromatin formation modulate dosage compensation and X chromosome structure. (Left) Genes involved in heterochromatin establishment or the siRNA pathway. Ago2 recruits Su(var)3-9 to nascent transcripts in an siRNA-dependent manner, leading to enrichment of H3K9me2/3 (brown modification) and HP1a binding. Ago2 interacts with Barr, nuclear lamins and many other proteins, including HP1a. HP1a interacts with several other proteins that enhance roX1 roX2 male lethality. (Right) Proteins that interact with the dosage compensation machinery. Transcribed regions (gray arrow) are enriched for H3K36me3 (gray modification). Both the MSL complex (Top) and JASPER/JIL-1 (Bottom) bind H3K36me3 and are enriched in active genes. MOF acetylates H4K16 (green modifications). MOF and MSL3 interact with Chro, Mtor and several additional nuclear pore proteins (not shown). JIL-1 phosphorylates H3S10 (red modification), a mark enriched on the male X chromosome, and interacts with lamins, Chro and Skeletor. (Middle) H4K16ac enhances chromatin binding of the ISWI-containing NURF complex. The Gcn5-containing ATAC complex Interacts with NURF, acetylates chromatin (orange modifications) and may also modify NURF. Interactions are validated but may not be direct.