Feedback control of sex determination by dosage compensation revealed through Caenorhabditis elegans sdc-3 mutations

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Abstract

In Caenorhabditis elegans, sex determination and dosage compensation are coordinately controlled through a group of genes that respond to the primary sex determination signal. Here we describe a new gene, sdc-3, that also controls these processes. In contrast to previously described genes, the sex determination and dosage compensation activities of sdc-3 are separately mutable, indicating that they function independently. Paradoxically, the sdc- 3 null phenotype fails to reveal the role of sdc-3 in sex determination: sdc- 3 null mutations that lack both activities disrupt dosage compensation but cause no overt sexual transformation. We demonstrate that the dosage compensation defect of sdc-3 null alleles suppresses their sex determination defect. This self-suppression phenomenon provides a striking example of how a disruption in dosage compensation can affect sexual fate. We propose that the suppression occurs via a feedback mechanism that acts at an early regulatory step in the sex determination pathway to promote proper sexual identity.

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DeLong, L., Plenefisch, J. D., Klein, R. D., & Meyer, B. J. (1993). Feedback control of sex determination by dosage compensation revealed through Caenorhabditis elegans sdc-3 mutations. Genetics, 133(4), 875–896. https://doi.org/10.1093/genetics/133.4.875

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