x chromosome inactivation during drosophila spermatogenesis在果蝇精子形成x染色体失活.pdf
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PLoS BIOLOGY
X Chromosome Inactivation
during Drosophila Spermatogenesis
*
Winfried Hense, John F. Baines, John Parsch
Department of Biology II, University of Munich, Planegg-Martinsried, Germany
Genes with male- and testis-enriched expression are under-represented on the Drosophila melanogaster X
chromosome. There is also an excess of retrotransposed genes, many of which are expressed in testis, that have
‘‘escaped’’ the X chromosome and moved to the autosomes. It has been proposed that inactivation of the X
chromosome during spermatogenesis contributes to these patterns: genes with a beneficial function late in
spermatogenesis should be selectively favored to be autosomal in order to avoid inactivation. However, conclusive
evidence for X inactivation in the male germline has been lacking. To test for such inactivation, we used a transgenic
construct in which expression of a lacZ reporter gene was driven by the promoter sequence of the autosomal, testis-
specific ocnus gene. Autosomal insertions of this transgene showed the expected pattern of male- and testis-specific
expression. X-linked insertions, in contrast, showed only very low levels of reporter gene expression. Thus, we find that
X linkage inhibits the activity of a testis-specific promoter. We obtained the same result using a vector in which the
transgene was flanked by chromosomal insulator sequences. These results are consistent with global inactivation of
the X chromosome in the male germline and support a selective explanation for X chromosome avoidance of genes
with beneficial effects late in spermatogenesis.
Citation: Hense W
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