4.3 Article

Sex Differences in Drosophila Somatic Gene Expression: Variation and Regulation by doublesex

Journal

G3-GENES GENOMES GENETICS
Volume 6, Issue 7, Pages 1799-1808

Publisher

GENETICS SOCIETY AMERICA
DOI: 10.1534/g3.116.027961

Keywords

sex determination; Drosophila; sex hierarchy; doublesex; transcriptome; gene expression; sex bias; RNA-seq; Genetics of Sex

Funding

  1. Florida State university (FSU) College of Medicine
  2. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01GM073039]
  3. Department of Biological Sciences at Auburn University
  4. Auburn University Office of Vice President for Research

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Sex differences in gene expression have been widely studied in Drosophila melanogaster. Sex differences vary across strains, but many molecular studies focus on only a single strain, or on genes that show sexually dimorphic expression in many strains. How extensive variability is and whether this variability occurs among genes regulated by sex determination hierarchy terminal transcription factors is unknown. To address these questions, we examine differences in sexually dimorphic gene expression between two strains in Drosophila adult head tissues. We also examine gene expression in doublesex (dsx) mutant strains to determine which sex-differentially expressed genes are regulated by DSX, and the mode by which DSX regulates expression. We find substantial variation in sex-differential expression. The sets of genes with sexually dimorphic expression in each strain show little overlap. The prevalence of different DSX regulatory modes also varies between the two strains. Neither the patterns of DSX DNA occupancy, nor mode of DSX regulation explain why some genes show consistent sex-differential expression across strains. We find that the genes identified as regulated by DSX in this study are enriched with known sites of DSX DNA occupancy. Finally, we find that sex-differentially expressed genes and genes regulated by DSX are highly enriched on the fourth chromosome. These results provide insights into a more complete pool of potential DSX targets, as well as revealing the molecular flexibility of DSX regulation.

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