Authors
Erica Larschan, Eric P Bishop, Peter V Kharchenko, Leighton J Core, John T Lis, Peter J Park, Mitzi I Kuroda
Publication date
2011/3/3
Journal
Nature
Volume
471
Issue
7336
Pages
115-118
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
The evolution of sex chromosomes has resulted in numerous species in which females inherit two X chromosomes but males have a single X, thus requiring dosage compensation. MSL (Male-specific lethal) complex increases transcription on the single X chromosome of Drosophila males to equalize expression of X-linked genes between the sexes. The biochemical mechanisms used for dosage compensation must function over a wide dynamic range of transcription levels and differential expression patterns. It has been proposed that the MSL complex regulates transcriptional elongation to control dosage compensation, a model subsequently supported by mapping of the MSL complex and MSL-dependent histone 4 lysine 16 acetylation to the bodies of X-linked genes in males, with a bias towards 3′ ends,,,,. However, experimental analysis of MSL function at the mechanistic level has been challenging owing to …
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