Litcius/Paper detail

Role of Alternative Splicing in Sex Determination in Vertebrates

Isabel Gómez‐Redondo, Benjamín Planells, Paula Navarrete, Alfonso Gutiérrez‐Adán

2021Sexual Development25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

During the process of sex determination, a germ-cell-containing undifferentiated gonad is converted into either a male or a female reproductive organ. Both the composition of sex chromosomes and the environment determine sex in vertebrates. It is assumed that transcription level regulation drives this cascade of mechanisms; however, transcription factors can alter gene expression beyond transcription initiation by controlling pre-mRNA splicing and thereby mRNA isoform production. Using the key time window in sex determination and gonad development in mice, it has been reported that new non-transcriptional events, such as alternative splicing, could play a key role in sex determination in mammals. We know the role of key regulatory factors, like WT1(+/-KTS) or FGFR2(b/c) in pre-mRNA splicing and sex determination, indicating that important steps in the vertebrate sex determination process probably operate at a post-transcriptional level. Here, we discuss the role of pre-mRNA splicing regulators in sex determination in vertebrates, focusing on the new RNA-seq data reported from mice fetal gonadal transcriptome.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyAlternative splicingRNA splicingGonadTranscriptomeTranscription (linguistics)GeneGene isoformGene expressionMessenger RNAGeneticsSexual differentiationRegulation of gene expressionRNACell biologyEndocrinologyPhilosophyLinguisticsGenetic and Clinical Aspects of Sex Determination and Chromosomal AbnormalitiesRenal and related cancersCancer-related molecular mechanisms research