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The non-dosage compensated Lsp1 α gene of Drosophila melanogaster escapes acetylation by MOF in larval fat body nuclei, but is flanked by two dosage compensated genes

Abstract

Background

In Drosophila melanogaster dosage compensation of most X-linked genes is mediated by the male-specific lethal (MSL) complex, which includes MOF. MOF acetylates histone H4 at lysine 16 (H4K16ac). The X-linked Larval serum protein one α (Lsp1 α) gene has long been known to be not dosage compensated. Here we have examined possible explanations for why the Lsp1 α gene is not dosage compensated.

Results

Quantitative RNase protection analysis showed that the genes flanking Lsp1 α are expressed equally in males and females and confirmed that Lsp1 α is not dosage compensated. Unlike control X-linked genes, Lsp1 α was not enriched for H4K16ac in the third instar larval fat body, the tissue in which the gene is actively expressed. X-linked Lsp1α promoter-lacZ reporter transgenes are enriched for H4K16ac in third instar larval fat body. An X-linked reporter gene bracketed by Lsp1 α flanking regions was dosage compensated. One of the genes flanking Lsp1 α is expressed in the same tissue. This gene shows a modest enrichment for H4K16ac but only at the part of the gene most distant from Lsp1 α. Phylogenetic analyses of the sequences of the genomes of 12 Drosophila species shows that Lsp1 α is only present within the melanogaster subgroup of species.

Conclusion

Lsp1 α is not modified by the MSL complex but is in a region of the X chromosome that is regulated by the MSL complex. The high activity or tissue-specificity of the Lsp1 α promoter does not prevent regulation by the MSL complex. The regions flanking Lsp1 α do not appear to block access by the MSL complex. Lsp1 α appears to have recently evolved within the melanogaster subgroup of Drosophila species. The most likely explanation for why Lsp1 α is not dosage compensated is that the gene has not evolved a mechanism to independently recruit the MSL complex, possibly because of its recent evolutionary origin, and because there appears to be a low level of bound MSL complex in a nearby gene that is active in the same tissue.

Background

X chromosome dosage compensation in Drosophila melanogaster is achieved by doubling the transcription of most genes on the single X chromosome in male flies [14]. This dosage compensation is mediated by the male-specific lethal (MSL) complex containing both protein and non-coding RNA components [4]. The genes encoding the MSL proteins were identified through mutagenesis screens, in which the mutant phenotype is male lethality (m ale s pecific l ethal mutations) [5, 6]. Five proteins form the core of the MSL complex: MSL1, MSL2, MSL3, MLE and the histone acetyl transferase MOF, which acetylates histone H4 at lysine 16 (H4K16ac) [7, 8]. The acetylase activity of MOF is essential for male viability [6]. There is considerable evidence that these proteins associate in a complex that localises specifically to the male X chromosome [912]. The male specificity of the complex is due to MSL2, which is negatively regulated at the translational level by the female-specific protein SXL [13, 14].

MSL1 and MSL2 are essential and sufficient for binding of a partial complex to ~35 high affinity sites along the X chromosome [9, 12, 15, 16]. Two of these sites correspond to the genes encoding the non-coding RNAs, roX1 and roX2 (R NA o n the X chromosome), which are part of the MSL complex [17]. These RNAs are redundant, but essential for dosage compensation, although approximately 5% of male roX1 roX2 double mutants survive as adults [18]. It has been proposed that the high affinity binding regions constitute chromatin entry sites, at which the MSL complex assembles prior to spreading into flanking regions of chromatin [17]. However, chromatin entry sites are not essential for targeting of the MSL complex [19, 20]. An alternative model proposes that the MSL complex is targeted to individual X-linked genes by uncharacterised sequence motifs that are absent from autosomal genes [20]. This model is supported by recent high-resolution chromatin immunoprecipitation studies (ChIP-chip), which found that MSL binding is gene specific [2123]. However, autosomal genes inserted on the X chromosome can be dosage compensated [24], indicating that bound MSL complex may be able to regulate the expression of nearby genes in the chromatin domain.

The X-linked gene Larval serum protein 1 alpha (Lsp1 α) appears to escape dosage compensation by the MSL complex [25, 26]. LSP1α is an abundant protein expressed in the fat body of third instar larvae [27], which forms a complex with autosomal LSP1 proteins to act as nutrient reservoir for pupal development [28]. LSP1α is not essential for survival, as flies carrying mutations in all of the Lsp1 genes are viable [29]. Lsp1 α could escape regulation by the MSL complex by one of two distinct possibilities. Either, it is flanked by boundary elements that block access of the MSL complex or it lacks characteristics required to attract the MSL complex, such as DNA sequences or chromatin composition. Both of these models are supported by the observation that the Lsp1 α gene is either partially or fully dosage compensated when relocated to two other locations on the male X chromosome [30].

In this study we examine possible explanations for why Lsp1 α is not dosage compensated.

Results

Lsp1 α is flanked by dosage compensated genes

In order to determine whether Lsp1 α is the only gene within its chromosomal region to escape dosage compensation, the dosage compensation status of the genes flanking Lsp1 α was examined. Previous work indicated that the gene 5' of Lsp1 α, CG2560, is dosage compensated [31]. Several other genes in the region near Lsp1 α were identified after publication of the Drosophila genome sequence.

Five putative genes exist in the region immediately surrounding Lsp1 α as predicted by cDNA evidence from the Drosophila genome project [32]: CG15926, CG2560 (referred to as L12 by [31]), CG15730, CG2556 and CG11146 (Figure 1A). Since CG11146 is separated from Lsp1 α by two intervening genes, it was not examined in this study. The developmental stage in which Lsp1 α, CG15926, CG2560 and CG2556 are expressed was determined by Northern RNA hybridisation analysis (Figure 1B and 1C). As expected Lsp1 α is very highly expressed and easily detected in total RNA from third instar larvae (Figure 1B). CG2560 is expressed in all larval stages, as previously reported. Four transcripts were detected for CG2556, which is downstream of Lsp1 α (Figure 1C). These transcripts are expressed differentially throughout development but importantly are present in third instar larvae. Thus, genes 5' and 3' of Lsp1 α are expressed at the same stage of development. Transcripts from CG15730, the gene immediately 3' of Lsp1α, were not detected at any of the developmental stages analysed using 2 μg of poly(A)+ mRNA, or in adults using RT-PCR (data not shown). It is possible that this intron-less gene may be expressed in only a few cells, or may require stimuli not present under standard conditions. Since expression could not be detected, it was not examined further in this study. CG15926 transcripts are present in ~2-fold higher levels in hemisected (head plus thorax) adult males compared to females as shown by RNase protection (data not shown), thus the dosage compensation status of this gene could not be determined. There were slightly higher transcript levels of the rp49 loading control in whole adult females than males (Figure 1C) as shown previously [33], possibly due to strong ovarian expression. For this reason, hemisected adults or sexed larvae were used in this study for determining a gene's dosage compensation status.

Figure 1
figure 1

The genes flanking Lsp1 α are dosage compensated, and CG2556 is expressed in the same tissue as Lsp1 α (A) The predicted genes flanking Lsp1 α (exons in black). (B) Northern RNA hybridization analysis of 10 μg of total RNA from embryos 0 – 2 h after laying (E0), embryos 12 h after laying (E12), first instar larvae (L1), second instar larvae (L2), third instar larvae (L3), pupae (P), adult males (M), and adult females (F). All embryo, larval and pupae samples consist of mixed male and female RNA. Northerns were probed with cDNAs for Lsp1 α (a) and rp49 (b). (C) Northern hybridization analysis of 2 μg of poly(A) mRNA from the developmental stages described in (B). Northerns were probed with cDNAs for CG15926 (a), CG2560 (b), CG2556 (c) and rp49 (d). (D) Real-time RT-PCR of Lsp1 α, Lsd-2, Gpdh, rp49, CG2556 and CG2560 in male fat body and whole third instar male larvae cDNA. The fold enrichment of each transcript in fat body compared to whole larvae cDNA is shown. (E)CG2560 and Pgd mRNA was measured by RNase protection relative to rp49 in male and female first instar larvae. Mean female/male transcript ratios and 95% confidence intervals are indicated for 3 experiments. (F) Lsp1 α, CG2556, Pgd and rp49 mRNA was measured by RNase protection in male and female y w staged-third instar larvae. Mean female/male transcript ratios and 95% confidence intervals are indicated for 3 experiments.

Multi-probe quantitative RNase protection analysis was used to determine the dosage compensation status of CG2560 and CG2556 genes in first and third instar larvae respectively. Control probes detected transcripts from the X-linked dosage compensated 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (Pgd) [34, 35] and constitutive autosomal ribosomal protein 49 (rp49) [33] genes. First instar larvae were sexed using a stock in which only the male larvae express GFP. Female to male CG2560 and Pgd transcript ratios were normalised to rp49, as the 3 probes were analysed simultaneously. A female to male transcript ratio of one indicates that a gene is compensated, whereas a female to male ratio of two suggests that a gene is not compensated. CG2560 and Pgd have female to male transcript ratios of 1.02 ± 0.08 and 0.84 ± 0.20 respectively (Figure 1E) indicating that these genes are both dosage compensated. This concurs with the CG2560 transcript ratios obtained in second instar larvae using an alternative method [31]. Single probe RNase protection of CG2556 and Lsp1 α was conducted in male and female y w staged-third instar larvae relative to Pgd and rp49, as both transcripts are present at this developmental stage (Figure 1B,C). Female to male CG2556, Lsp1 α and Pgd transcript ratios were not normalised to rp49, as the 4 probes were analysed separately due to the similar size of the protected RNAs. Rp49 and Pgd have female to male transcript ratios of 0.79 ± 0.27 and 0.91 ± 0.42 respectively (Figure 1F), demonstrating equivalent RNA levels are present in both sexes. CG2556 and Lsp1 α have female to male transcript ratios of 0.99 ± 0.15 and 1.81 ± 0.14 respectively (Figure 1F), indicating that CG2556 is dosage compensated but Lsp1 α is not. These results show that two of the genes flanking Lsp1 α are dosage compensated, and suggest that Lsp1 α is unique within its chromosomal domain in escaping regulation by the MSL complex.

The regions flanking Lsp1 α do not contain elements able to block dosage compensation of an X-linked transgene

The genes flanking Lsp1 α a re dosage compensated, but Lsp1 α is not. One possible explanation for why Lsp1 α escapes dosage compensation is that flanking sequence elements somehow block access of the MSL complex to the gene. To test this possibility, the genomic regions between Lsp1 α and CG2560 (I) and between Lsp1 α and CG2556 (I2) were inserted either side of an arm-lacZ reporter construct (I-arm-lacZ-I2). We have previously shown that X-linked arm-lacZ transgenes are fully dosage compensated [36, 37], although it is not known if this is due to local spreading of the MSL complex or to direct recruitment of the complex. If the Lsp1 α flanking regions contain elements able to block access of the MSL complex, it follows that X-linked I-arm-lacZ-I2 transgenic lines will not be dosage compensated, and will exhibit female to male reporter activity ratios of two. Due to the presence of promoter sequences within the (I) region, female to male reporter activity ratios were analysed in adult flies, in which only the armadillo promoter is active, rather than in third instar larvae in which both the armadillo and Lsp1 α promoter sequences are active. All autosomal and X-linked arm-lacZ lines had female to male β-galactosidase activity ratios of ~1 (Table 1). Both autosomal I-arm-lacZ-I2 lines also had female to male β-galactosidase activity ratios of ~1. The X-linked I-arm-lacZ-I2 line exhibited a female to male β-galactosidase activity ratio of ~1, indicating that the (I) and (I2) regions do not contain elements able to prevent the MSL complex from binding to and dosage compensating arm-lacZ on the X chromosome.

Table 1 Mean male and female β-galactosidase activities and ratios in X-linked and autosomal l-arm-lacz-l2 and arm-lacZ adults.

The precise chromosomal location of these X-linked transgenes was determined by inverse PCR. The I-arm-lacZ-I2:19C3 transgene has inserted between the X-linked CG1631 and CG15462 genes that are uncharacterised with respect to expression and are part of an approx. 140 kb gene poor region of the chromosome (19C2 to 19C5). The nearest genes that showed significant binding of MSL1 and MSL3 in embryos are Rab10 (19C1) and l(1)G0004 (19C6) that are approximately 95 kb upstream and 45kb downstream respectively from the site of insertion of the I-arm-lacZ-I2 transgene [21, 23] (Additional file 1; Panel B). The arm-lacZ:10D8 transgene has inserted in the first intron of the X-linked inaF (CG2457) gene, which encodes a protein with calcium channel regulator activity involved in rhodopsin mediated signalling that is expressed in the head and eye of adult flies [38]. Although, it has not been reported if inaF is dosage compensated, significant binding of MSL1 is detected at the 3' end of this gene in embryos [23].

Lsp1 α is not enriched for histone H4 acetylated at lysine 16 in male larval fat body nuclei

There was no binding of MSL1 or MSL3 to Lsp1 α in embryos or of MSL3 to Lsp1 α in SL2 cells [2123] (Additional file 1; Panel D). This would be the expected result since Lsp1 α is not dosage compensated. In SL2 cells, ~90% of MSL3 binding clusters were within expressed genes, with an enrichment in the middle and 3' end [21]. Since Lsp1 α is not actively expressed in SL2 cells it was possible that MSL complex could be binding to Lsp1 α in the tissue in which the gene is expressed, namely third instar larval fat body. As acetylation of H4 at lysine 16 is dependent on the MOF component of the MSL complex, we measured the relative level of H4K16ac on Lsp1 α in larval fat body nuclei by chromatin immunoprecipitation analysis. Chromatin from hand-dissected male y w larval fat body was immunoprecipitated with antibody against H4K16ac. The X-linked, fat body-expressed Lipid storage droplet-2 (Lsd-2) and Pgd genes showed 3 – 10 fold enrichments after immunoprecipitation compared to the autosomal gene, Glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (Gpdh), which had a relative enrichment of one (Figure 2). The differential levels of enrichment within Pgd have been observed previously [39]. Lsp1 α exhibited no enrichment for H4K16ac, confirming the prediction that actively expressed Lsp1 α would not be acetylated by MOF as it is not dosage compensated.

Figure 2
figure 2

Lsp1 α is not acetylated at H4K16, but X-linked Lsp1α (-573 to +20)-lacZ transgenes are. Chromatin from y w, Lsp1α (-573 to +20)-lacZ:19E7 and Lsp1α (-573 to +20)-lacZ:9B4 male third instar larval fat body nuclei immunoprecipitated with antibody against H4K16ac. The fold enrichment of immunoprecipitated DNA relative to input DNA is shown for two experiments (95% confidence intervals indicated). Fold enrichment is normalized to Gpdh, which is set to 1. A 3 – 10 fold enrichment is observed for the control genes Pgd and Lsd-2 and both X-linked Lsp1α (-573 to +20)-lacZ transgenes. However, no enrichment is observed for Lsp1 α. Two primer sets were used to amplify different regions within the Pgd and Lsp1 α genes. All primers are designed to the 3' UTR or 3' region of the open reading frame with the exception of the Pgd-543 set, which is within the second intron but towards the 5' end of the Pgd gene.

Lsp1 α promoter-lacZ X-linked transgenes are enriched for H4K16ac in larval fat body

Since the majority of MSL target genes are widely expressed [2123], we next investigated if the Lsp1 α gene was not enriched for H4K16ac because of the high activity and tissue specificity of its promoter. The Lsp1 α gene promoter was fused to the lacZ reporter gene and two X-linked lines containing this gene construct were obtained. Chromatin from male Lsp1α (-573 to +20)-lacZ:9B4 and Lsp1α (-573 to +20)-lacZ:19E7 third instar larval fat bodies was immunoprecipitated with antibody against H4K16ac (Figure 2). As for the y w strain, the X-linked Lsd-2 and Pgd genes were enriched for H4K16ac. The two X-linked Lsp1α (-573 to +20)-lacZ transgenes also showed 3-fold enrichments within lacZ. Thus the lack of enrichment of H4K16ac within Lsp1 α is not because of the tissue-specificity of the gene promoter.

There are two possible explanations for why X-linked Lsp1α-lacZ transgenes were enriched for H4K16ac in larval fat body. Either the transgenes have inserted near MSL complex target genes or alternatively MSL complex is directly recruited to the lacZ gene. The latter would seem less likely as the gene is of bacterial origin and MSL complex is not recruited to autosomally integrated lacZ transgenes [37]. The Lsp1α (-573 to +20)-lacZ:9B4 transgene has inserted in the first intron of the CG15309 gene. While there are no MSL1 or MSL3 binding sites within CG15309, there are clusters of sites within the closely adjacent l(1)G0230 gene in embryos, SL2 and Clone 8 cells (Additional file 1; Panel C). The Lsp1α (-573 to +20)-lacZ:19E7 transgene has inserted between the CG1529 and Ntf-2 (CG1740) genes. There are clusters of MSL1 and MSL3 binding sites within both the CG1529 and Ntf-2 genes in embryos, SL2 and Clone 8 cells [21, 23] (Additional file 1; Panel A). While it is not known if CG15309, CG1529 or Ntf-2 gene are actively expressed and targeted by the MSL complex in third instar larval fat body, Ntf-2 is likely to be expressed in this tissue based on mutant phenotypes [40]. That MSL complex distribution appears to remain largely stable across development [21, 22] would suggest that MSL complex would be bound to the CG15309, CG1529 and Ntf-2 genes in larval fat body.

CG2556 is expressed in larval fat body but shows only a moderate enrichment for H4K16ac at the 3' end

If X-linked Lsp1α-lacZ transgenes are enriched for H4K16ac because they have inserted near MSL target genes then why is Lsp1 α not enriched for H4K16ac as the flanking genes are dosage compensated? Since there is a strong correlation between MSL complex binding and gene transcription [21], one possibility is that the flanking genes are not transcribed in third instar larval fat body. Both CG2560 and CG2556 are expressed in third instar larvae (Figure 1C), but their tissue distribution is unknown. In order to determine whether CG2560 and CG2556 are expressed in the fat body, real-time RT-PCR of cDNA from male fat body and whole larvae was conducted on CG2560 and CG2556 relative to the fat body specific genes Lsp1 α [27] and Lsd-2 [41], and the constitutively expressed genes Gpdh and rp49. Lsp1 α and Lsd-2 show 2.24 and 1.82-fold enrichments respectively in fat body cDNA compared to whole third instar larval cDNA, while Gpdh and rp49 show 0.78 and 0.79-fold enrichments respectively (Figure 1D). CG2560 demonstrates 0.03-fold enrichment in fat body cDNA compared to whole third instar larval cDNA, indicating that it is not expressed in fat body tissue. This is consistent with its proposed function as a structural component of the larval cuticle [42] and specific expression in dorsal and ventral epidermis in late embryos [43]. CG2556 shows 0.92-fold enrichment in fat body cDNA compared to whole third instar larval cDNA, indicating that it is expressed in both this tissue and other parts of the larvae. Transcripts for the gene immediately 3' of Lsp1 α, CG15730, were not detected in third instar larvae hence it is unlikely that the MSL complex is targeted to this gene in fat body tissue.

Since CG2556 is also expressed in fat body we performed ChIP experiments with isolated fat body nuclei and anti-H4K16ac antibody. There was no enrichment with a 5' UTR fragment (fold enrichment of 1.10 ± 0.09 relative to Gpdh in y w male fat bodies). Further, the 3' UTR of CG2556 is only moderately enriched for this histone modification (fold enrichment of 1.93 ± 0.77 relative to Gpdh in y w male fat bodies), suggesting MSL complex is not present in high levels in this region of the chromosome in third instar larval fat body, although the gene is clearly dosage compensated. The moderate enrichment of H4K16ac at the 3' end of CG2556 is consistent with the high-density ChIP-chip profiles that found that the MSL complex binds to intragenic regions, particularly the 3' end of X-linked genes [21, 23].

Lsp1 α has most likely evolved recently within the melanogaster subgroup of Drosophila species

It had been suggested that Lsp1 α has arisen from a duplication and translocation of an autosomal Lsp1 β gene [44]. The sequencing of the genomes of twelve Drosophila species [45] allowed us to address when Lsp1 α evolved. As expected homologues of Lsp1 β and Lsp1γ were found in all Drosophila species examined. Lsp1 α homologues, however, are only present in the melanogaster subgroup of species, which are thought to have descended from a common ancestor 8 – 12 million years ago [46] (Figure 3). In these species Lsp1 α lies between homologues of CG2560 and CG15730, while in the remainder of the species these genes are immediately adjacent (including D. ananassae, which is part of the melanogaster group but not sub-group). Thus it would appear that Lsp1 α arose relatively recently within the melanogaster subgroup of species and so may not have yet evolved MSL binding sites. However, a tree based on maximum likelihood analysis of LSP1 sequences (Methods) suggests that Lsp1 α arose before the divergence of Drosophila species (Figure 3). If so, then Lsp1 α has been precisely lost on at least four separate occasions (ancestor of: D. ananassae, obscura group, willistoni group and Drosophila subgenus). More likely some residues within LSP1α proteins may not be under the same functional constraints as in LSP1β proteins leading to the observed divergence. The Lsp1 β gene seems to be particularly prone to duplication events as duplicated Lsp1 β genes were found in D. ananassae, D. grimshawi and D. willistoni genome sequences (Figure 3). The two Lsp1 β genes are immediately adjacent to each other in these three species. The maximum likelihood analysis suggests the duplication events have occurred recently within each of the three species.

Figure 3
figure 3

Lsp1 α is present in five closely related Drosophila species, but is absent in more distantly related species. Maximum likelihood tree based on the ungapped regions of a ClustalX alignment (additional file 4) of the LSP1α, LSP1β and LSP1γ protein sequences from D. melanogaster (Dmel), D. yakuba (Dyak), D. erecta (Dere), D. simulans (Dsim), D. sechellia (Dsec), D. mojavensis ( Dmoj), D. buzzatii (Dbuz), D. ananassae (Dana), D. pseudoobscura (Dpse), D. willistoni (Dwil), D. grimshawi (Dgri), D. persimilis (Dper) and D. virilis (Dvir). The Lsp1-like protein arylphorin from the blowfly Calliphora vicina [61] is also included and bootstrap support is shown on the branches. LSP1α homologues (in the boxed region) are present only in D. melanogaster, D. yakuba, D. erecta, D. simulans and D. sechellia.

Discussion

Lsp1 α is a well characterised example of a non-dosage compensated gene [25]. In contrast, two genes situated less than 5 kb either side of it, are expressed equivalently in male and female larvae. That Lsp1 α escapes regulation by the MSL complex was shown by the lack of enrichment for H4K16ac in the tissue in which it is expressed. These results are consistent with high-resolution ChIP-chip studies that found that MSL complex binding was gene-specific [2123]. Further, the complex bound predominantly to constitutively expressed genes. Lsp1 α is certainly not a housekeeping gene, but rather is a gene that is very highly expressed in a specific cell type and a specific stage of development. Since Lsp1 α is not an essential gene [29] there would have been little evolutionary pressure to acquire MSL binding sites since it evolved, which appears to have been relatively recently in the melanogaster subgroup of species. The only gene in the Lsp1 α gene region that is bound to MSL1 and MSL3 in embryos is Rab40 [21, 23] (Additional file 1), which is approx. 30 kb upstream of Lsp1 α. Thus Lsp1 α appears to have arisen within a region of the X chromosome that has few strong MSL binding sites in whole embryos.

In the two-step model for MSL complex targeting to X chromosome genes, the complex is initially bound to sequences of higher affinity and then spreads locally to nearby expressed genes [17]. Such a mechanism would explain why autosomal genes inserted onto the X chromosome can be dosage compensated [24]. According to this model, it would be anticipated that the MSL complex could spread locally from flanking dosage compensated genes that are active in third instar larval fat cells to Lsp1 α. Of the two flanking dosage compensated genes, only the downstream CG2556 gene is transcribed in third instar larval fat cells. However, we could not detect any enrichment for H4K16ac at the 5' end and only a modest enrichment for H4K16ac at the 3' end, which is ~11 kb from Lsp1 α. Thus it appears that MSL complex does not spread to the Lsp1 α gene in its normal chromatin location because the level of complex bound to nearby active genes in fat body nuclei is low. The ChIP-chip studies identified several examples of neighbouring genes that have differential MSL binding profiles. It remains to be determined if, like Lsp1 α, the unbound genes are not enriched for H4K16ac in the cells in which they are actively transcribed. If so, it would be of interest to know if these genes, like Lsp1 α [30], can respond to the MSL complex when relocated to other locations on the X chromosome.

We found no evidence for boundary elements flanking the Lsp1 α gene that could prevent access of the MSL complex to an active gene. An arm-lacZ reporter gene bracketed by sequences that flank the Lsp1 α gene was fully dosage compensated when inserted onto the X chromosome. The MSL complex could reach the I-arm-lacZ-I2 transgene by spreading from a nearby gene with bound complex or could bind directly to the transgene. The I-arm-lacZ-I2 transgene inserted into a very gene poor region that is largely devoid of bound MSL complex in embryos and SL2 cells [21, 23]. The nearest gene with significant levels of bound complex in embryos is approx. 45 kb from the transgene insertion site. The MSL complex can spread hundreds of kilobases from an autosomally integrated roX gene [17], so it is possible that the MSL complex could spread 45kb along the male X chromosome. It is also possible that MSL complex may be bound to more genes in this region in adults, the stage we measured β-galactosidase activity. However, while MSL complex binding pattern is not invariant, it is largely similar in distinct cell types [21, 22]. Thus, while it is clear that Lsp1 α is not flanked by sequences that prevent access of the MSL complex, we cannot conclude if this is because they fail to block local spreading of the complex. If MSL complex does not spread locally to the integrated arm-lacZ reporter gene, then the transgene must independently recruit MSL complex. This may simply be because the MSL complex preferentially binds to expressed genes [21]. However, transcription is not sufficient to recruit complex. Legube et al (2006) [22] found that the promoter regions of some MSL1 target genes are enriched in DREF binding sites. The arm promoter has several possible DREF binding sites (not shown). armadillo is an X-linked constitutively expressed gene [47]. The 1.6 kb arm fragment in the arm-lacZ construct contains 5' flanking sequence, the two major start sites of transcription, the first intron and start of second exon [47]. There is significant binding of MSL1 and MSL3 to this fragment of the arm gene in embryos and SL2 cells respectively [21, 23]. Thus the arm promoter may contribute to recruitment of MSL complex to an actively expressed arm-lacZ transgene. While arm-lacZ transgenes are fully dosage compensated at several locations on the X chromosome [36, 37], there is no binding of the MSL complex to autosomally integrated arm-lacZ transgenes, which are equally expressed in males and females [37]. Thus if the arm-lacZ transgene can independently recruit MSL complex, it can only do so in an X chromosomal environment. Clearly additional studies are needed to identify what features of the arm-lacZ transgene are important for recruitment of the MSL complex. The development of site-specific integration systems for Drosophila [48, 49] should greatly facilitate such studies as various gene constructs could all be tested at the same locations on the X chromosome.

Conclusion

In this study we have examined possible explanations for why the X-lined Lsp1 α gene is not dosage compensated. Lsp1 α is not enriched for H4K16ac in third instar larval fat body, the tissue in which the gene is actively expressed. Thus Lsp1 α is not compensated because the chromatin is not modified by the MSL complex at the gene's normal location on the X chromosome. Lsp1 α is in a region of the X chromosome that is subject to regulation by the MSL complex, as genes flanking and within 5 kb of Lsp1 α are dosage compensated. Lsp1 α does not appear to be surrounded by sequence elements that prevent access of the MSL complex as these flanking regions did not prevent a reporter gene from being dosage compensated when inserted on the X chromosome. The stage-specificity or high activity of the Lsp1 α promoter does not prevent dosage compensation because X-linked lacZ transgenes under the control of the Lsp1 α promoter were enriched for H4K16ac in larval fat body. Only one of the genes flanking Lsp1 α is expressed in the same tissue as Lsp1 α and this gene showed no enrichment for H4K16ac at its 5' end (end closest to Lsp1 α) and showed only a modest enrichment at its 3' end in larval fat body. Homologues of Lsp1 α were found only in the melanogaster subgroup of species. The most likely explanation for why Lsp1 α is not dosage compensated is that the gene has not evolved a mechanism to independently recruit the MSL complex, possibly because of its recent evolutionary origin, and because there appears to be a low level of bound MSL complex in a nearby gene that is active in the same tissue.

Recent ChIP-chip analyses have identified several expressed X-linked genes that are not bound by the MSL complex. The significance of this study is that we have addressed possible mechanisms by which one such gene escapes regulation by the MSL complex.

Methods

Northern RNA Hybridisation Analysis

RNA was extracted using TRIzol reagent (Invitrogen) and RNA secure (Ambion). Poly(A) RNA was isolated using oligo(dT) cellulose (Roche) and Northern hybridization analysis conducted as described in [50].

Real-time RT-PCR Assays

RNA from 10 male third instar larvae or 10 male third instar larval fat bodies was treated with Turbo DNase (Ambion) and reverse transcribed (Roche). Quantitative real-time PCR was conducted in triplicate (variation <15%) using the LightCycler FastStart DNA MasterPLUS SYBR Green I reaction mix (Roche) in a LightCycler Instrument (Roche) on 2 μl of 10-fold or 100-fold diluted cDNA in a 10 μl reaction volume. Information about the primers used in this study is available upon request. An annealing temperature of 55°C and an extension of 12 s were used. The crossing point (CP) was automatically determined by the LightCycler software (Roche). Fold enrichment was determined by 2^(CP whole larvae – CP fat body). The primer sets used were; Lsp1 α (5'CTCGCTGACGGACAAC and 5'GGGCTCAGTAAGGTCCA), Rp49 (5'CGGTTACGGATCGAACA and 5'CGATCTCGCCGCAGTAAA), Lsd-2 (5'AGTGTACTAGCCGATACG and 5'TCTGACTCCCGGATCT), CG2560 (5'ATGGCAATGCTTACGGT and 5'GAGGTGGCTGATAATCGTAG), CG2556 (5'TGGTAATGGCGGCCTAAA and 5'TGCGAGTGTTCAGCTTG), Gpdh (5'GTGCCCGACCTGGTTGAG and 5'CTTGCCTTCAGGTGACGC).

Quantitative RNase Protection Assays

Quantitative RNase protection was conducted on 3 – 4 separate collections of matched female and male FM7I, P{w [+mC]=Act GFP}JMR3/c(1)DX,y1f1 first instar larvae or y w blue food-staged third instar larvae [51] using the RPA III kit (Ambion). Antisense RNA probes for CG2560, Pgd, rp49, Lsp1 α and CG2556 were synthesized with T7, T3 or SP6 RNA polymerase (Roche). The relative radioactivity of the probes was adjusted by increasing the concentration of [α-32P]CTP and decreasing the concentration of unlabeled CTP in the reaction cocktails. Unincorporated radionucleotide was removed with the NucAway spin column (Ambion). The CG2556 probe was gel purified (Qiagen). 3 – 10 fold molar excess of probe was added to 4 μg (CG2560, Pgd, rp49 and Lsp1 α) or 20 μg (CG2556) of DNase-treated phenol/chloroform purified RNA and annealed overnight with RNA in the presence of pellet paint co-precipitant (Novagen); protected RNA probes were detected and quantified on 5% polyacrylamide urea gels with the Storm 860 phosphorimager (Molecular Dynamics) or the FLA-5000 phosphorimager (Fujifilm). The quantification value of each protected RNA species was corrected for the background value of the sample of yeast RNA hybridized to probe treated with RNase. The mass of RNA used in each assay was determined to be within the linear range of the RNase protection assay for each protected RNA. The sizes of the protected RNAs were 366 nt for CG2560, 391 nt + 294 nt for Lsp1 α, 268 nt for CG2556, 171 nt + 43 nt for Pgd and 312 nt for rp49.

Generation of Transgenic Fly Lines

All recombinant DNA manipulations were carried out using standard procedures [50] unless otherwise specified. The 883 bp region between Lsp1 α and CG2560 including the Lsp1 α promoter (I) and 4596 bp region between the 3' end of Lsp1 α and the 5' end of CG2556 (I2) were amplified by PCR from genomic y w D. melanogaster DNA, and cloned into pGEM-T Easy (Promega). The primer sequences used are available upon request. Pst I-Not I and EcoR I-Stu I linkers were inserted into the Pst I site 3' of lacZ-SV40 and the EcoR I site 5' of armadillo in pCaSpeR-arm-βgal (arm-lacZ) [47]. The blunt-ended Not I (I) and Not I (I2) fragments were cloned into the Stu I and Not I sites of this plasmid respectively, generating I-arm-lacZ-I2. The 593 bp Lsp1 α promoter (-573 to +20) was amplified by PCR from genomic y w D. melanogaster DNA, and cloned into pGEM-T Easy (Promega). The blunt-ended Not I promoter fragment was cloned into the Stu I site of pCaSpeR-arm-βgal in which the EcoR I/Asp 718 armadillo promoter fragment had been replaced with a linker containing EcoR I,BamH I, Nhe I, Stu I and Asp 718 sites, generating the Lsp1α (-573 to +20)-lacZ construct. Transgenic flies carrying these constructs were generated from y w stock using standard procedures [52]. The site of transgene integration was determined where possible using inverse PCR, and all transgenic lines consist of single insertions as determined by Southern hybridisation analysis.

β-galactosidase Assays

β-galactosidase assays were performed on hemisected adults as described in [36]. Assays were performed in triplicate on 3 separate collections unless otherwise stated. Means and standard deviations of activities and ratios were calculated from the 3 separate collections.

Chromatin Immunoprecipitation Assays

Chromatin immunoprecipitation was based on the procedures described in [5355] with additional modifications suggested by Edwin Smith (Emory University, 2005, personal communications). Fat bodies manually dissected from 200 male third instar larvae were quick frozen then ground in liquid nitrogen, and homogenized in 5 ml of 10 mM Hepes [pH 7.6], 1 mM EDTA, 150 mM NaCl, 0.6% Triton X-100, 4 mM DTT, 10 mM sodium butyrate with protease inhibitors (Roche). After centrifugation at 500 × g for 30 s at 4°C, the supernatant was stored on ice for 5 min, followed by centrifugation at 1500 × g for 10 min at 4°C. Pelleted nuclei were resuspended in 360 μl of nucleus isolation buffer (NIB: 0.25 M sucrose, 10 mM Tris-HCl [pH 7.4], 3 mM CaCl2, 10 mM sodium butyrate, protease inhibitors) and incubated with formaldehyde at a final concentration of 1% for 10 min at room temperature with shaking. Nuclei were pelleted at 1500 × g for 10 min at 4°C, resuspended in 360 μl of NIB, and pelleted. Nuclei were resuspended in 200 μl of 1% SDS, 50 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.1], 10 mM EDTA, 10 mM sodium butyrate with protease inhibitors for 10 min on ice, followed by sonication in the presence of 425–600 mm acid-washed glass beads (Sigma) for 6 × 30 s pulses at power level 1.5 (VirSonic). This sonication produced DNA fragments with a mean size of 500 bp. The sonicated chromatin lysate was diluted with 1.8 ml of chromatin immunoprecipitation buffer (CIB: 25 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.0], 137 mM NaCl, 2.7 mM KCl, 1% Triton X-100, 1 mM EDTA, 10 mM sodium butyrate) and centrifuged at 14,000 × g for 10 min at 4°C. Input DNA was purified from 200 μl of this supernatant by incubation with 10 μl 10 mg/ml RNase for 10 min at 37°C, and 20 μl 10 mg/ml proteinase K for 6 h at 37°C. Crosslinks were reversed by incubation for 6 h at 65°C. DNA was purified using the QIAquick PCR purification kit (Qiagen).

The remaining 1.8 ml of sonicated chromatin lysate was pre-incubated with 60 μl 50% Protein A Sepharose Bead suspension (Sigma), protease inhibitors and 9 μl 10 mg/ml salmon sperm DNA (ssDNA) for 1 h with shaking at 4°C. 6 μl of rabbit anti histone H4 (Ac16) antibody (AHP417; Serotec) was pre-bound to 120 μl 50% Protein A Sepharose Beads suspension in 1 ml of CIB with protease inhibitors, 10 μl 10 mg/ml ssDNA and 20 μl 10 mg/ml BSA (NEB) for 1 h with shaking at 4°C. The pre-cleared chromatin lysate was incubated with the pre-bound antibody-beads for 3 h at 4°C with shaking. Following this the beads were washed successively in: 150 mM NaCl, 20 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.0], 2 mM EDTA, 1% Triton X-100, 0.1% SDS, 10 mM sodium butyrate; 500 mM NaCl, 20 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.0], 2 mM EDTA, 1% Triton X-100, 0.1% SDS, 10 mM sodium butyrate; 250 mM LiCl, 10 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.0], 1 mM EDTA, 1% sodium deoxycholate, 1% IGEPAL CA-630 (Sigma), 10 mM sodium butyrate; TE buffer. Beads were rinsed and suspended in TE Buffer. Immunoprecipitated DNA (ChIP DNA) was incubated with 1 μl 10 mg/ml RNase for 10 min at 37°C, followed by incubation with 5 μl 10% SDS and 2 μl 10 mg/ml proteinase K for 6 h at 37°C. Crosslink reversal and DNA purification were conducted as described for input DNA.

Quantitative real-time PCR was conducted as described for real-time RT-PCR assays. Undiluted immunoprecipitated DNA (2 μl) and 100-fold diluted input DNA (2 μl) were assayed with each primer set in triplicate (variation <15%). The primer pairs used were; Lsp1 α-1184 (5'CTCGCTGACGGACAAC and 5'GGGCTCAGTAAGGTCCA), Lsp1 α-2439 (5'CTTCAAGTTGTAGATCTGATAACATTCCGA and 5'GCTTAACAGAGAAATCTGAATACGTTGG), Pgd-543 (5'GGATAAGCAGGTGGAAGTAGGAAG and 5'ACACTTGTGGTTACGGTTTTCG), Pgd-2303 (5'GAAGGGCACGGGCAAGTG and 5'CAATGCCGCCGTAATTAAGTCTC), Lsd-2 (5'GAAACACACGCACACGG and 5'TCCCAGCGAGCGTACAA), Gpdh (5'GTGCCCGACCTGGTTGAG and 5'CTTGCCTTCAGGTGACGC), lacZ (5'GCGCGAATTGAATTATGGCCC and 5'GCCATGTGCCTTCTTCCG). The Pgd and Gpdh primer sets are identical to those used in a previous study [39]. The identity of the PCR products amplified by each primer combination was confirmed by sequencing. Fold enrichment was determined by 2°CP input X-linked gene – CP ChIP X-linked gene)/2°CP Gpdh – CP ChIP Gpdh).

Computational Identification and Analysis of LSP1 Proteins from Drosophila species

The Drosophila melanogaster LSP1α (GenBank accession no. NP_511138), LSP1β (GenBank accession no. NP_476624) and LSP1γ (GenBank accession no. NP_523868) protein sequences were used to search the nucleotide sequences available in "DroSpeGe: Drosophila Species Genomes" [45] using tBlastn . The scaffolds on which the LSP1 homologues were identified are described in additional files 2 and 3. LSP1β and LSP1γ had independently been identified in D. buzzatii and D. pseudoobscura [44], as had LSP1γ from D. simulans (GenBank accession no. AAB71667). An alignment of the dataset was performed in ClustalX [56], ambiguous bases and gaps were removed from the alignment using PAUP*4.10b [57]. Using ProtTest [58], the optimal model of sequence evolution was determined to be WaG [59]. A maximum likelihood analysis was performed on the data in Phyml using the WaG model with 100 bootstrap replicates [60]. The D. simulans LSP1α sequence is incomplete due to a gap in the genomic sequence.

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Acknowledgements

We thank Edwin Smith for advice on chromatin immunoprecipitation assays, Tobius Straub for help accessing ChIP-chip profiles, Peter Lockhart and Richard Carter for advice and assistance on generation of the Lsp1 tree and Malcolm Cook for assistance with the binding site analysis.

This work was supported by a grant from the RSNZ Marsden Fund (MJS) and a FRST high achiever doctoral scholarship to VMW.

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Correspondence to Maxwell J Scott.

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VW carried out all of the experiments and drafted the manuscript. MS conceived of the study, and participated in its design and coordination and helped to draft the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

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12867_2006_172_MOESM1_ESM.pdf

Additional file 1: High resolution ChIP-chip profiles of MSL complex binding in the Lsp1 α, CG15309 , CG1529 and CG1631 gene regions. Summary of data from Gilfillan et al (2006) [23] and Alekseyenko et al (2006) [21]. The figures were downloaded from the web site maintained by the Becker group [62]. The Lsp1 α(-573 to +20)-lacZ:19E7 insertion site (A), I-arm-lacZ-I2:19C3 insertion site (B) and Lsp1 α(-573 to +20)-lacZ:9B4 insertion site (C) are shown in comparison to the Lsp1 α genomic position at 11A12 (D). (PDF 413 KB)

12867_2006_172_MOESM2_ESM.doc

Additional file 2: Lsp1 α is flanked by CG2560 and CG15730 in five Drosophila species, but these genes lie immediately adjacent to one another in the other species that lack Lsp1 α (DOC 46 KB)

Additional file 3: Lsp1 gene identification in Drosophila species. (DOC 40 KB)

12867_2006_172_MOESM4_ESM.pdf

Additional file 4: Clustal X alignment of Drosophila Lsp1 sequences and Lsp1-like protein arylphorin from C. vicina. (PDF 333 KB)

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Weake, V.M., Scott, M.J. The non-dosage compensated Lsp1 α gene of Drosophila melanogaster escapes acetylation by MOF in larval fat body nuclei, but is flanked by two dosage compensated genes. BMC Molecular Biol 8, 35 (2007). https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.1186/1471-2199-8-35

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  • Accepted:

  • Published:

  • DOI: https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.1186/1471-2199-8-35

Keywords