Abstract
In 1932, Müller first used the term "antimorphic" to describe mutant alleles that have an effect that is antagonistic to that of the wild-type allele from which they were derived. In a previous characterization of mutant alleles of the Drosophila melanogaster Hox gene, Sex combs reduced (Scr), we identified the missense, antimorphic allele SCR14, which is a Ser10-to-Leu change in the N-terminally located, bilateranspecific octapeptide motif. Here we propose that the cause of SCR14 antimorphy is the acquisition of a leucine zipper oligomerization motif spanning the octapeptide motif and adjacently located protostomespecific LASCY motif. Analysis of the primary and predicted secondary structures of the SCR N-terminus suggests that while the SCR+ encodes a short, α-helical region containing one putative heptad repeat, the same region in SCR14 encodes a longer, α-helical region containing two putative heptad repeats. In addition, in vitro cross-linking assays demonstrated strong oligomerization of SCR14 but not SCR+. For in vivo sex comb formation, we observed reciprocal inhibition of endogenous SCR+ and SCR14 activity by ectopic expression of truncated SCR14 and SCR+ peptides, respectively. The acquisition of an oligomerization domain in SCR14 presents a novel mechanism of antimorphy relative to the dominant negative mechanism, which maintains oligomerization between the wild-type and mutant protein subunits. © 2014 Sivanantharajah and Percival-Smith.
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Sivanantharajah, L., & Percival-Smith, A. (2014). Acquisition of a leucine zipper motif as a mechanism of antimorphy for an allele of the Drosophila Hox gene sex combs reduced. G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics, 4(5), 829–838. https://doi.org/10.1534/g3.114.010769
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