
Dosage compensation is a strategy to deal with the imbalance of sex chromosomal gene products relative to autosomes and also between the sexes. The mechanisms that ensure dosage compensation for X-chromosome activity have been extensively studied in mammals, worms, and flies. Although each entails very different mechanisms to equalize the dose of X-linked genes between the sexes, they all involve the co-ordinate regulation of hundreds of genes specifically on the sex chromosomes and not the autosomes. In addition to chromatin modifications and changes in higher order chromatin structure, nuclear organization is emerging as an important component of these chromosome-wide processes and in the specific targeting of dosage compensation complexes to the sex chromosomes. Preferential localization within the nucleus and 3D organization are thought to contribute to the differential treatment of two identical homologs within the same nucleus, as well as to the chromosome-wide spread and stable maintenance of heterochromatin.
Cell Nucleus, Male, Chromosomes, Human, X, X Chromosome, Chromatin, Drosophila melanogaster, Genes, X-Linked, Dosage Compensation, Genetic, Animals, Humans, Female, Caenorhabditis elegans
Cell Nucleus, Male, Chromosomes, Human, X, X Chromosome, Chromatin, Drosophila melanogaster, Genes, X-Linked, Dosage Compensation, Genetic, Animals, Humans, Female, Caenorhabditis elegans
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