Dosage Compensation and the Distribution of Sex-Biased Gene Expression in Drosophila: Considerations and Genomic Constraints
Several studies in Drosophila have shown a paucity of male-biased genes (i.e., genes that express higher in males than in females) on the X chromosome. Dosage compensation (DC) is a regulatory mechanism of gene expression triggered in males that hypertranscribes the X-linked genes to the level of transcription in females. There are currently two different hypotheses about the effects of DC on the distribution of male-biased genes: (1) it might limit male-expression level, or (2) it might interfere with the male upregulation of gene expression. Here, we used previously published gene expression datasets to reevaluate both hypotheses and introduce a mutually exclusive prediction that helped us to reject the hypothesis that the paucity of male-biased genes in the X chromosome is due to a limit in the male-expression level. Our analysis also uncovers unanticipated details about how DC interferes with the genomic distribution of both, male-biased and female-biased genes. We suggest that DC actually interferes with female downregulation of gene expression and not male upregulation, as previously suggested.
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      - Gallach, Miguel
 - Betrán, Esther
 
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      Category  | 
            Journal Paper | 
Divisions  | 
              Bioinformatics and Computational Biology | 
Journal or Publication Title  | 
                Journal of Molecular Evolution | 
ISSN  | 
              0022-2844 | 
Publisher  | 
              Springer US | 
Place of Publication  | 
              Cham, Switzerland | 
Page Range  | 
              pp. 199-206 | 
Number  | 
              4-5 | 
Volume  | 
              82 | 
Date  | 
              May 2016 | 
Official URL  | 
              http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00239-016-9735-y | 
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