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Sex lethal: RNA-binding protein

Introduction

Figure 1. Sxl sex determination and dosage compensation pathways. Functionality of Sxl is determined by the number of X chromosomes. The functional protein (XX) causes a cascade that leads to female structures and behaviors, while the nonfunctional protein results in the default male structures and behaviors.
Figure 1. Sxl sex determination and dosage compensation pathways. Functionality of Sxl is determined by the number of X chromosomes. The functional protein (XX) causes a cascade that leads to female structures and behaviors, while the nonfunctional protein results in the default male structures and behaviors.
Sex lethal (Sxl) is an RNA-binding protein that plays a vital role in sex determination and dosage compensation in Drosophila melanogaster, the common fruit fly [1]. Sxl binds specifically to the continuous single-stranded RNA sequence 5’-UGUUUUUUU [2]. Functional copies of Sxl are expressed only in female fruit flies, where they induce sex-specific splicing patterns in the transcript of the Transformer (Tra) gene that lead to its function. Tra initiates a cascade pathway that results in the development of female structures and behaviors (Figure 1). Sxl binds to its recognition element in the Tra pre-mRNA transcript, thereby blocking association of the splicing factor U2AF at the nearby splice site. Without the association of this essential splicing factor, the 3’ splice site shifts downstream, causing the removal of a premature stop codon and preventing truncation and inactivation of the Tra protein [1]. The pre-mRNA transcript of Male-specific lethal 2 (Msl-2) is the downstream target through which Sxl regulates dosage compensation. Active Sxl protein (in females) binds to two recognition elements on Msl-2 causing the retention of the first intron in the 5’UTR of Msl-2. Sxl protein bound at this intron then blocks translation, preventing expression of Msl-2 in females [1]. With no Msl-2 protein present, the Male-specific lethal complex cannot form and carry out its function of upregulating expression of genes on the X chromosome [3] (Figure 1).


Structure

Sex lethal (PDB: 1B7F)

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate

Autoregulation

Figure 4. Alternative splicing mechanism for autoregulation of Sxl. The presence of Sxl causes the alternative splicing of exon 3 in the female mRNA transcript. The retention of exon 3, along with the premature stop codon it contains, leads to a truncated and inactive Sxl protein in males.
Figure 4. Alternative splicing mechanism for autoregulation of Sxl. The presence of Sxl causes the alternative splicing of exon 3 in the female mRNA transcript. The retention of exon 3, along with the premature stop codon it contains, leads to a truncated and inactive Sxl protein in males.

Sxl controls its own levels of expression via positive and negative autoregulation. Sxl binds its own pre-mRNA transcript in a similar manner as its downstream targets, Tra and Msl2. Through binding to its recognition element, Sxl causes a 3’ splice site to be skipped. Alternative splicing occurs utilizing a 3’ splice site further downstream, cleaving out a premature stop codon within Exon 3 and preventing truncation and inactivation[1] (Figure 4). This is a pathway of positive autoregulation, as functional Sxl protein must be present to cause proper processing of the pre-mRNA. The negative autoregulation pathway of Sxl proceeds via repression of its own translation. The Sxl transcript contains the target polyuridine sequence within its 3’UTR. Sxl binds this target, and blocks translation[1]. Negative autoregulation allows maintenance of a stable and standard Sxl protein concentration. An excess of Sxl increases the degree of translation repression because more Sxl protein are present to potentially bind at the 3’UTR, while a shortage allows for more unrepressed translation.

Mutation

In fruit flies, dosage compensation is achieved by hyperexpression of the single X chromosome found in the male genome. The single X chromosome is hyperexpressed and regulated by a group of genes known as the Male-specific lethal genes. The genes involved work together to produce a complex known as the Male-specific lethal complex (Msl complex). One gene that is important in forming this complex is the gene that codes for the Msl-2 protein. Without this protein, the Msl complex cannot form [5]. Males exclusively make the Msl-2 protein and therefore exclusively create the Msl complex. Females cannot make the complex because the Sxl protein prevents the production of the Msl-2 protein. It does this by alternatively splicing an intron near the 5’ UTR. In males this intron is included and in females it is not [5]. Mutations of the Sxl protein can affect the formation of this complex and lead to death for females—hence the name sex lethal. If the Sxl gene is mutated in females, the formation of the Msl-2 complex will not be inhibited. If there is a functional Msl-2 complex in females then both of the X chromosomes will be hyperexpressed [5]. The overexpression of genes on the X chromosome is a fatal phenomenon ultimately caused by a mutation of the Sxl protein. Although a mutation to the Sxl gene is harmful to females, it has no effect on males because the functional Sxl gene is not expressed—a mutation in males has no phenotypic effect.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Black DL. Mechanisms of alternative pre-messenger RNA splicing. Annu Rev Biochem. 2003;72:291-336. doi: 10.1146/annurev.biochem.72.121801.161720., Epub 2003 Feb 27. PMID:12626338 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1146/annurev.biochem.72.121801.161720
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 Handa N, Nureki O, Kurimoto K, Kim I, Sakamoto H, Shimura Y, Muto Y, Yokoyama S. Structural basis for recognition of the tra mRNA precursor by the Sex-lethal protein. Nature. 1999 Apr 15;398(6728):579-85. PMID:10217141 doi:10.1038/19242
  3. Georgiev P, Chlamydas S, Akhtar A. Drosophila dosage compensation. Fly 2011;5(2):147-154. https://doi.org/10.4161/fly.5.2.14934
  4. 4.0 4.1 Clery A, Blatter M, Allain FH. RNA recognition motifs: boring? Not quite. Curr Opin Struct Biol. 2008 Jun;18(3):290-8. doi: 10.1016/j.sbi.2008.04.002. PMID:18515081 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.sbi.2008.04.002
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Penalva L, Sanchez L. RNA Binding Protein Sex-Lethal (Sxl) and Control of Drosophila Sex Determination and Dosage Compensation. Microbiol Mol Biol Rev.;67(3):343-356. doi: 10.1128/MMBR.67.3.343–359.2003

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