Genetics. Published Articles Ahead of Print: October 18, 2007, Copyright © 2007
doi:10.1534/genetics.107.078980


A more recent version of this article appeared on November 1, 2007.


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Sex-specific splicing of the honey bee doublesex gene reveals 300 million years of evolution at the bottom of the insect sex-determination pathway

1 University of Michigan
2 Michigan State University

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: jianzhi{at}umich.edu.

Submitted on July 17, 2007
Revised on August 30, 2007
Accepted on 5 September 2007


Abstract

Sex-determination mechanisms vary greatly among taxa. It has been proposed that genetic sex-determination pathways evolve in reverse order from the final step in the pathway up to the first. Consistent with this hypothesis, doublesex (dsx), the most downstream gene in the Drosophila sex-determination cascade that determines most sexual phenotypes, also determines sex in other dipterans and the silk moth, while the upstream genes vary among these species. However, it is unknown when dsx was recruited to the sex-determination pathway during insect evolution. Furthermore, sex-specific splicing of dsx, by which dsx determines sex, is different in pattern and mechanism between the moth and fly, raising an interesting question of how these insects have kept the executor of sex determination while allowing flexibility in the means of execution. To address these questions, we here study the dsx gene of the honey bee Apis mellifera, a member of the most basal lineage of holometabolous insects. We report that honey bee dsx is sex-specifically spliced and that it produces both the fly-type and moth-type splicing forms, indicating that the use of different splicing forms of Dsx in controlling sexual differentiation was present in the common ancestor of holometabolous insects. Our data suggest that in ancestral holometabolous insects, the female Dsx form is the default and the male form is generated by suppressing the splicing of the female form. Thus, it is likely that the dsx splicing activator system in flies, where the male form is the default, arose during early dipteran evolution.

Key Words: alternative splicing, doublesex, evolution, honey bee, sex determination




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