In Drosophila melanogaster the single male chromosome X undergoes an average twofold transcriptional upregulation for balancing the transcriptional output between sexes. Previous literature hypothesised that a global change in chromosome structure may accompany this process. However, recent studies based on Hi-C failed to detect these differences. Here we show that global conformational differences are specifically present in the male chromosome X and detectable using Hi-C data on sex-sorted embryos, as well as male and female cell lines, by leveraging custom data analysis solutions. We find the male chromosome X has more mid-/long-range interactions. We also identify differences at structural domain boundaries containing BEAF-32 in conjunc...
In Drosophila, dosage compensation of the single male X chromosome involves upregulation of expressi...
AbstractThe chromatin landscape of Drosophila: Heterochromatin differences between species, sexes, a...
The evolution of heteromorphic sex chromosomes (e.g., XY in males or ZW in females) has repeatedly e...
In Drosophila melanogaster the single male chromosome X undergoes an average twofold transcriptional...
X chromosome dosage compensation in Drosophila requires chromosome-wide coordination of gene activat...
Dosage compensation (DC) is a highly plastic process responsible for altering transcriptional regula...
Abstract Background Drosophila melanogaster females have two X chromosomes and two autosome sets (XX...
The Drosophila MSL complex mediates dosage compensation by increasing transcription of the single X ...
Abstract Background In animals with XY sex chromosomes, X-linked genes from a single X chromosome in...
The essential process of dosage compensation is required to equalize gene expression of X-chromosome...
The essential process of dosage compensation is required to equalize gene expression of X-chromosome...
X chromosome regulation represents a prime example of an epigenetic phenomenon where coordinated reg...
Drosophila MSL complex binds the single male X chromosome to upregulate gene expression to equal tha...
<div><p>The essential process of dosage compensation is required to equalize gene expression of X-ch...
SummaryThe X chromosome of Drosophila shows a deficiency of genes with male-biased expression [1–4],...
In Drosophila, dosage compensation of the single male X chromosome involves upregulation of expressi...
AbstractThe chromatin landscape of Drosophila: Heterochromatin differences between species, sexes, a...
The evolution of heteromorphic sex chromosomes (e.g., XY in males or ZW in females) has repeatedly e...
In Drosophila melanogaster the single male chromosome X undergoes an average twofold transcriptional...
X chromosome dosage compensation in Drosophila requires chromosome-wide coordination of gene activat...
Dosage compensation (DC) is a highly plastic process responsible for altering transcriptional regula...
Abstract Background Drosophila melanogaster females have two X chromosomes and two autosome sets (XX...
The Drosophila MSL complex mediates dosage compensation by increasing transcription of the single X ...
Abstract Background In animals with XY sex chromosomes, X-linked genes from a single X chromosome in...
The essential process of dosage compensation is required to equalize gene expression of X-chromosome...
The essential process of dosage compensation is required to equalize gene expression of X-chromosome...
X chromosome regulation represents a prime example of an epigenetic phenomenon where coordinated reg...
Drosophila MSL complex binds the single male X chromosome to upregulate gene expression to equal tha...
<div><p>The essential process of dosage compensation is required to equalize gene expression of X-ch...
SummaryThe X chromosome of Drosophila shows a deficiency of genes with male-biased expression [1–4],...
In Drosophila, dosage compensation of the single male X chromosome involves upregulation of expressi...
AbstractThe chromatin landscape of Drosophila: Heterochromatin differences between species, sexes, a...
The evolution of heteromorphic sex chromosomes (e.g., XY in males or ZW in females) has repeatedly e...