1. The X chromosome in C. elegans sex determination and dosage compensation
- Author
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Meyer, Barbara J
- Subjects
Biological Sciences ,Genetics ,Underpinning research ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Animals ,Caenorhabditis elegans ,Dosage Compensation ,Genetic ,Genes ,X-Linked ,Sex Chromosomes ,X Chromosome ,Developmental Biology ,Biochemistry and cell biology - Abstract
Abnormalities in chromosome dose can reduce organismal fitness and viability by disrupting the balance of gene expression. Unlike imbalances in chromosome dose that cause pathologies, differences in X-chromosome dose that determine sex are well tolerated. Dosage compensation mechanisms have evolved in diverse species to balance X-chromosome gene expression between sexes. Mechanisms underlying nematode X-chromosome counting to determine sex revealed how small quantitative differences in molecular signals are translated into dramatically different developmental fates. Mechanisms underlying X-chromosome dosage compensation revealed the interplay between chromatin modification and three-dimensional chromosome structure imposed by an X-specific condensin complex to regulate gene expression over vast chromosomal territories. In a surprising twist of evolution, this dosage-compensation condensin complex also regulates lifespan and tolerance to proteotoxic stress.
- Published
- 2022