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Stitzinger, S.M., Pellicena-Palle, A., Albrecht, E.B., Gajewski, K.M., Beckingham, K.M., Salz, H.K. (1999). Mutations in the predicted aspartyl tRNA synthetase of Drosophila are lethal and function as dosage-sensitive maternal modifiers of the sex determination gene Sex-lethal.  Mol. Gen. Genet. 261(1): 142--151.
FlyBase ID
FBrf0107310
Publication Type
Research paper
Abstract
Stable activation of the Drosophila sex determination gene Sex-lethal in the female embryo is a multistep process. Early in embryogenesis Sex-lethal is regulated at the level of transcription, and then later in embryogenesis Sex-lethal regulation switches to an autoregulatory RNA splicing mechanism. Previous studies have shown that successful activation of Sxl requires both maternally and zygotically provided gene products, many of which are essential for viability and have other, non-sex specific functions. Using a screen for dosage-sensitive modifiers we identified a new maternally expressed gene, l(2)49Db, as a likely participant in Sxl activation. We show that the establishment of the Sxl autoregulatory splicing loop, but not the earlier steps in Sxl activation, is sensitive to the maternal dosage of l(2)49Db. We further demonstrate that l(2)49Db encodes an aspartyl tRNA synthetase. Finally we present evidence that this effect is indirect, by demonstrating that mutations in tryptophanyl tRNA synthetase are also dosage-sensitive maternal modifiers of Sex-lethal. These data suggest that stable activation of Sex-lethal in the embryo may be particularly sensitive to perturbation of the translational machinery.
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Secondary IDs
    Language of Publication
    English
    Additional Languages of Abstract
    Parent Publication
    Publication Type
    Journal
    Abbreviation
    Mol. Gen. Genet.
    Title
    Molecular and General Genetics
    Publication Year
    1967-2001
    ISBN/ISSN
    0026-8925
    Data From Reference