4.8 Article

Transcript Length Mediates Developmental Timing of Gene Expression Across Drosophila

Journal

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 31, Issue 11, Pages 2879-2889

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msu226

Keywords

intron delay; syncytium; embryonic development; transcript length; Drosophila; gene structure evolution; genome evolution

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  2. National Institutes of Health [1R01GM097171-01A1]

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The time required to transcribe genes with long primary transcripts may limit their ability to be expressed in cells with short mitotic cycles, a phenomenon termed intron delay. As such short cycles are a hallmark of the earliest stages of insect development, we tested the impact of intron delay on the Drosophila developmental transcriptome. We find that long zygotically expressed genes show substantial delay in expression relative to their shorter counterparts, which is not observed for maternally deposited transcripts. Patterns of RNA-seq coverage along transcripts show that this delay is consistent with their inability to completely transcribe long transcripts, but not with transcriptional initiation-based regulatory control. We further show that highly expressed zygotic genes maintain compact transcribed regions across the Drosophila phylogeny, allowing conservation of embryonic expression patterns. We propose that the physical constraints of intron delay affect patterns of expression and the evolution of gene structure of a substantial portion of the Drosophila transcriptome.

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