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Sex-specific splicing of Z- and W-borne nr5a1 alleles suggests sex determination is controlled by chromosome conformation.

Xiuwen ZhangSusan WagnerClare E HolleleyJanine E DeakinKazumi MatsubaraIra W DevesonDenis O'MeallyHardip R PatelTariq EzazZhao LiChexu WangMelanie EdwardsJennifer Ann Marshall GravesArthur Georges
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2022)
Pogona vitticeps has female heterogamety (ZZ/ZW), but the master sex-determining gene is unknown, as it is for all reptiles. We show that nr5a1 (Nuclear Receptor Subfamily 5 Group A Member 1), a gene that is essential in mammalian sex determination, has alleles on the Z and W chromosomes (Z- nr5a1 and W- nr5a1 ), which are both expressed and can recombine. Three transcript isoforms of Z- nr5a1 were detected in gonads of adult ZZ males, two of which encode a functional protein. However, ZW females produced 16 isoforms, most of which contained premature stop codons. The array of transcripts produced by the W-borne allele (W- nr5a1 ) is likely to produce truncated polypeptides that contain a structurally normal DNA-binding domain and could act as a competitive inhibitor to the full-length intact protein. We hypothesize that an altered configuration of the W chromosome affects the conformation of the primary transcript generating inhibitory W-borne isoforms that suppress testis determination. Under this hypothesis, the genetic sex determination (GSD) system of P. vitticeps is a W-borne dominant female-determining gene that may be controlled epigenetically.
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