A single female-specific piRNA is the primary determiner of sex in the silkworm
- PMID: 24828047
- DOI: 10.1038/nature13315
A single female-specific piRNA is the primary determiner of sex in the silkworm
Abstract
The silkworm Bombyx mori uses a WZ sex determination system that is analogous to the one found in birds and some reptiles. In this system, males have two Z sex chromosomes, whereas females have Z and W sex chromosomes. The silkworm W chromosome has a dominant role in female determination, suggesting the existence of a dominant feminizing gene in this chromosome. However, the W chromosome is almost fully occupied by transposable element sequences, and no functional protein-coding gene has been identified so far. Female-enriched PIWI-interacting RNAs (piRNAs) are the only known transcripts that are produced from the sex-determining region of the W chromosome, but the function(s) of these piRNAs are unknown. Here we show that a W-chromosome-derived, female-specific piRNA is the feminizing factor of B. mori. This piRNA is produced from a piRNA precursor which we named Fem. Fem sequences were arranged in tandem in the sex-determining region of the W chromosome. Inhibition of Fem-derived piRNA-mediated signalling in female embryos led to the production of the male-specific splice variants of B. mori doublesex (Bmdsx), a gene which acts at the downstream end of the sex differentiation cascade. A target gene of Fem-derived piRNA was identified on the Z chromosome of B. mori. This gene, which we named Masc, encoded a CCCH-type zinc finger protein. We show that the silencing of Masc messenger RNA by Fem piRNA is required for the production of female-specific isoforms of Bmdsx in female embryos, and that Masc protein controls both dosage compensation and masculinization in male embryos. Our study characterizes a single small RNA that is responsible for primary sex determination in the WZ sex determination system.
Comment in
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Developmental genetics: Female silkworms have the sex factor.Nature. 2014 May 29;509(7502):570-1. doi: 10.1038/nature13336. Epub 2014 May 14. Nature. 2014. PMID: 24828037 No abstract available.
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Flipping the doublesex switch with a piRNA.Genome Biol. 2014 Jun 24;15(6):118. doi: 10.1186/gb4181. Genome Biol. 2014. PMID: 25002081 Free PMC article.
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