Litcius/Paper detail

Sex-specific splicing occurs genome-wide during early Drosophila embryogenesis

Mukulika Ray, Ashley Mae Conard, Jennifer A. Urban, Pranav Mahableshwarkar, Joseph Aguilera, Annie Huang, Smriti Vaidyanathan, Erica Larschan

2023eLife15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Sex-specific splicing is an essential process that regulates sex determination and drives sexual dimorphism. Yet, how early in development widespread sex-specific transcript diversity occurs was unknown because it had yet to be studied at the genome-wide level. We use the powerful Drosophila model to show that widespread sex-specific transcript diversity occurs early in development, concurrent with zygotic genome activation. We also present a new pipeline called time2Splice to quantify changes in alternative splicing over time. Furthermore, we determine that one of the consequences of losing an essential maternally deposited pioneer factor called CLAMP (chromatin-linked adapter for MSL proteins) is altered sex-specific splicing of genes involved in diverse biological processes that drive development. Overall, we show that sex-specific differences in transcript diversity exist even at the earliest stages of development..

Topics & Concepts

BiologyAlternative splicingRNA splicingGenomeGeneticsGeneSexual dimorphismEvolutionary biologyComputational biologyRNAMessenger RNAEndocrinologyRNA Research and SplicingRNA modifications and cancerRNA and protein synthesis mechanisms