Sex-specific alternative splicing of RNA from the transformer gene results from sequence-dependent splice site blockage
pmid: 2503251
Sex-specific alternative splicing of RNA from the transformer gene results from sequence-dependent splice site blockage
Sex-specific alternative splicing of RNA from the Drosophila transformer gene involves competition between two 3' splice sites. In the absence of Sex-lethal activity (as in males), only one site functions; in the presence of Sex-lethal activity (as in females), both sites function. Information for sex-specific splice site choice is contained within the intron itself. Deletions of the splice site used in males lead to Sex-lethal-independent use of the otherwise female-specific site. The relative amounts of unspliced and spliced RNA derived from these mutant genes do not change with changes in Sex-lethal activity. Specific nucleotide changes in the non-sex-specific splice site do not affect splicing activity but eliminate Sex-lethal-induced regulation. A deletion removing material between the two splice sites does not eliminate sex-specific regulation, while a deletion of the female splice site leads to a female-specific increase in unspliced RNA. These results are consistent with a model in which female-specific factors block the function of the non-sex-specific 3' splice site.
- Syracuse University United States
- Salk Institute for Biological Studies United States
Male, Sex Differentiation, RNA Splicing, DNA Mutational Analysis, Chromosome Mapping, Introns, Drosophila melanogaster, Ribonucleases, Gene Expression Regulation, Animals, Female
Male, Sex Differentiation, RNA Splicing, DNA Mutational Analysis, Chromosome Mapping, Introns, Drosophila melanogaster, Ribonucleases, Gene Expression Regulation, Animals, Female
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