Conservation of the global sex determination gene tra-1 in distantly related nematodes

  1. André Pires-daSilva and
  2. Ralf J. Sommer1
  1. Max-Planck Institut für Entwicklungsbiologie, Abteilung Evolutionsbiologie, Spemannstrasse 37-39, D-72076 Tübingen, Germany

Abstract

Sex determination has long intrigued evolutionists, geneticists, and developmental biologists in a similar way. Substantial evidence indicates that sex determination evolves rapidly and, therefore, can be used to study how molecular patterning processes evolve. In Caenorhabditis elegans, sex determination relies on a signaling pathway that involves a cascade of negatively acting factors, finally triggering the GLI-family zinc-finger transcription factor TRA-1. We have started to investigate sex determination in the nematode satellite species Pristionchus pacificus that is separated from C. elegans for 200–300 million years. In P. pacificus, animals with two X chromosomes develop as hermaphrodites, whereas XO animals develop as males. We used an unbiased forward genetic approach and isolated several mutants with a hermaphrodite to male transformation of the XX karyotype. We identified one complementation group as representing the P. pacificus ortholog of tra-1, providing the first evidence for the conservation of a global sex determination gene over a time period of at least 200 million years. A Ppa-tra-1 morpholino phenocopies Ppa-tra-1 mutants and establishes the morpholino technology as a reverse genetic approach in P. pacificus.

Keywords

Footnotes

  • Article and publication are at http://www.genesdev.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gad.293504.

  • 1 Corresponding author.

    1 E-MAIL ralf.sommer{at}tuebingen.mpg.de; FAX 49-7071-601-498.

    • Accepted March 26, 2004.
    • Received December 1, 2003.
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