A DBHS family member regulates male determination in the filariasis vector Armigeres subalbatus.
Peiwen LiuWenqiang YangLing KongSiyu ZhaoZhensheng XieYijie ZhaoYang WuYijia GuoYugu XieTong LiuBinbin JinJinbao GuZhijian Jake TuAnthony A JamesXiao-Guang ChenPublished in: Nature communications (2023)
The initial signals governing sex determination vary widely among insects. Here we show that Armigeres subalbatus M factor (AsuMf), a male-specific duplication of an autosomal gene of the Drosophila behaviour/human splicing (DBHS) gene family, is the potential primary signal for sex determination in the human filariasis vector mosquito, Ar. subalbatus. Our results show that AsuMf satisfies two fundamental requirements of an M factor: male-specific expression and early embryonic expression. Ablations of AsuMf result in a shift from male- to female-specific splicing of doublesex and fruitless, leading to feminization of males both in morphology and general transcription profile. These data support the conclusion that AsuMf is essential for male development in Ar. subalbatus and reveal a male-determining factor that is derived from duplication and subsequent neofunctionalization of a member of the conserved DBHS family.
Keyphrases
- endothelial cells
- poor prognosis
- transcription factor
- binding protein
- high resolution
- genome wide
- mass spectrometry
- copy number
- machine learning
- liquid chromatography
- dengue virus
- long non coding rna
- electronic health record
- big data
- aedes aegypti
- artificial intelligence
- tandem mass spectrometry
- simultaneous determination