Sexual Dimorphism of Body Size Is Controlled by Dosage of the X-Chromosomal Gene Myc and by the Sex-Determining Gene tra in Drosophila
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] M. Wolfner. Lindsley and Sandler et al. on Gene Dosage and the Drosophila Genome , 2016, Genetics.
[2] I. Miguel-Aliaga,et al. The sexual identity of adult intestinal stem cells controls organ size and plasticity , 2016, Nature.
[3] E. Hafen,et al. Genome-Wide Analysis Reveals Novel Regulators of Growth in Drosophila melanogaster , 2015, bioRxiv.
[4] S. Grewal,et al. The Sex Determination Gene transformer Regulates Male-Female Differences in Drosophila Body Size , 2015, PLoS genetics.
[5] D. Grifoni,et al. Drosophila Myc: A master regulator of cellular performance. , 2015, Biochimica et biophysica acta.
[6] P. Verstreken,et al. Dynamin photoinactivation blocks Clathrin and α-adaptin recruitment and induces bulk membrane retrieval , 2014, The Journal of cell biology.
[7] H. Nijhout,et al. The developmental control of size in insects , 2014, Wiley interdisciplinary reviews. Developmental biology.
[8] T. Cline,et al. Drosophila switch gene Sex-lethal can bypass its switch-gene target transformer to regulate aspects of female behavior , 2013, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[9] P. Gallant. Myc function in Drosophila. , 2013, Cold Spring Harbor perspectives in medicine.
[10] D. Grifoni,et al. dMyc expression in the fat body affects DILP2 release and increases the expression of the fat desaturase Desat1 resulting in organismal growth. , 2013, Developmental biology.
[11] Jianlin Cheng,et al. Dosage compensation and inverse effects in triple X metafemales of Drosophila , 2013, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[12] Arnaldo Carreira-Rosario,et al. Mei-P26 Cooperates with Bam, Bgcn and Sxl to Promote Early Germline Development in the Drosophila Ovary , 2013, PloS one.
[13] H. Salz,et al. Sex-lethal enables germline stem cell differentiation by down-regulating Nanos protein levels during Drosophila oogenesis , 2012, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[14] T. Tanimura,et al. Identification of a Novel Gene, Anorexia, Regulating Feeding Activity via Insulin Signaling in Drosophila melanogaster , 2011, The Journal of Biological Chemistry.
[15] T. Matsuo,et al. Calcineurin and Its Regulator Sra/DSCR1 Are Essential for Sleep in Drosophila , 2011, The Journal of Neuroscience.
[16] Joseph P Dunham,et al. Somatic sex-specific transcriptome differences in Drosophila revealed by whole transcriptome sequencing , 2011, BMC Genomics.
[17] M. Eisen,et al. Noncanonical Compensation of Zygotic X Transcription in Early Drosophila melanogaster Development Revealed through Single-Embryo RNA-Seq , 2011, PLoS biology.
[18] P. Schedl,et al. The Drosophila Myc gene, diminutive, is a positive regulator of the Sex-lethal establishment promoter, Sxl-Pe , 2011, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[19] G. Davidowitz,et al. Sex differences in phenotypic plasticity of a mechanism that controls body size: implications for sexual size dimorphism , 2010, Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
[20] E. Popodi,et al. A Molecularly Defined Duplication Set for the X Chromosome of Drosophila melanogaster , 2010, Genetics.
[21] T. Kaufman,et al. A New Resource for Characterizing X-Linked Genes in Drosophila melanogaster: Systematic Coverage and Subdivision of the X Chromosome With Nested, Y-Linked Duplications , 2010, Genetics.
[22] L. Beukeboom,et al. Insect sex determination: it all evolves around transformer. , 2010, Current opinion in genetics & development.
[23] R. Delanoue,et al. The steroid hormone ecdysone controls systemic growth by repressing dMyc function in Drosophila fat cells. , 2010, Developmental cell.
[24] J. Birchler,et al. Reflections on studies of gene expression in aneuploids. , 2010, The Biochemical journal.
[25] M. O’Connor,et al. A fat body-derived IGF-like peptide regulates postfeeding growth in Drosophila. , 2009, Developmental cell.
[26] E. Hafen,et al. A combined proteomic and genetic analysis identifies a role for the lipid desaturase Desat1 in starvation-induced autophagy in Drosophila , 2009, Autophagy.
[27] E. Rulifson,et al. Remote control of insulin secretion by fat cells in Drosophila. , 2009, Cell metabolism.
[28] N. Perrimon,et al. Integration of Insulin receptor/Foxo signaling and dMyc activity during muscle growth regulates body size in Drosophila , 2009, Development.
[29] T. Cline,et al. Sexual Back Talk With Evolutionary Implications: Stimulation of the Drosophila Sex-Determination Gene Sex-lethal by Its Target transformer , 2008, Genetics.
[30] M. Van Doren,et al. The creation of sexual dimorphism in the Drosophila soma. , 2008, Current topics in developmental biology.
[31] J. Erickson,et al. Indirect Effects of Ploidy Suggest X Chromosome Dose, Not the X:A Ratio, Signals Sex in Drosophila , 2007, PLoS biology.
[32] Ravinder Singh,et al. Genome-Wide Identification of Alternatively Spliced mRNA Targets of Specific RNA-Binding Proteins , 2007, PloS one.
[33] J. Watts,et al. Fatty Acid Desaturation and the Regulation of Adiposity in Caenorhabditis elegans , 2007, Genetics.
[34] P. Schedl,et al. The master switch gene sex-lethal promotes female development by negatively regulating the N-signaling pathway. , 2007, Developmental cell.
[35] J. David,et al. Genetic variability of sexual size dimorphism in a natural population ofDrosophila melanogaster: An isofemale-line approach , 2003, Journal of Genetics.
[36] W. Blanckenhorn,et al. Proximate Causes of Rensch’s Rule: Does Sexual Size Dimorphism in Arthropods Result from Sex Differences in Development Time? , 2006, The American Naturalist.
[37] Hugo J. Bellen,et al. P[acman]: A BAC Transgenic Platform for Targeted Insertion of Large DNA Fragments in D. melanogaster , 2006, Science.
[38] Stephen F. Goodwin,et al. Control of Male Sexual Behavior in Drosophila by the Sex Determination Pathway , 2006, Current Biology.
[39] L. Johnston,et al. Myc in model organisms: a view from the flyroom. , 2006, Seminars in cancer biology.
[40] M. Lercher,et al. X-chromosome-wide profiling of MSL-1 distribution and dosage compensation in Drosophila. , 2006, Genes & development.
[41] J. I. Horabin. Splitting the Hedgehog signal: sex and patterning in Drosophila , 2005, Development.
[42] C. Antoniewski,et al. Antagonistic Actions of Ecdysone and Insulins Determine Final Size in Drosophila , 2005, Science.
[43] B. Edgar,et al. The Transcriptional Repressor dMnt Is a Regulator of Growth in Drosophila melanogaster , 2005, Molecular and Cellular Biology.
[44] B. Edgar,et al. Myc-dependent regulation of ribosomal RNA synthesis during Drosophila development , 2005, Nature Cell Biology.
[45] B. Edgar,et al. Cyclin D Does Not Provide Essential Cdk4-Independent Functions in Drosophila , 2004, Genetics.
[46] C. Lehner,et al. The Drosophila meiotic kleisin C(2)M functions before the meiotic divisions , 2004, Chromosoma.
[47] J. S. Britton,et al. dMyc is required for larval growth and endoreplication in Drosophila , 2004, Development.
[48] David Stein,et al. Drosophila dMyc is required for ovary cell growth and endoreplication , 2004, Development.
[49] B. Edgar,et al. Genomic binding by the Drosophila Myc, Max, Mad/Mnt transcription factor network. , 2003, Genes & development.
[50] E. Hafen,et al. The Drosophila insulin/IGF receptor controls growth and size by modulating PtdInsP(3) levels. , 2002, Development.
[51] B. Yandell,et al. Loss of stearoyl–CoA desaturase-1 function protects mice against adiposity , 2002, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[52] R. Nusse,et al. Ablation of Insulin-Producing Neurons in Flies: Growth and Diabetic Phenotypes , 2002, Science.
[53] E. Hafen,et al. An evolutionarily conserved function of the Drosophila insulin receptor and insulin-like peptides in growth control , 2001, Current Biology.
[54] E. Kondorosi,et al. Plant cell-size control: growing by ploidy? , 2000, Current opinion in plant biology.
[55] R. Eisenman,et al. The Myc/Max/Mad network and the transcriptional control of cell behavior. , 2000, Annual review of cell and developmental biology.
[56] D. Prober,et al. Drosophila myc Regulates Cellular Growth during Development , 1999, Cell.
[57] J. Valcárcel,et al. The Drosophila splicing regulator sex-lethal directly inhibits translation of male-specific-lethal 2 mRNA. , 1998, RNA.
[58] D. Fairbairn. Allometry for Sexual Size Dimorphism: Pattern and Process in the Coevolution of Body Size in Males and Females , 1997 .
[59] R. Kelley,et al. Sex lethal controls dosage compensation in Drosophila by a non-splicing mechanism , 1997, Nature.
[60] B. Meyer,et al. Vive la différence: males vs females in flies vs worms. , 1996, Annual review of genetics.
[61] P. Schedl,et al. Sex-specific control of Sex-lethal is a conserved mechanism for sex determination in the genus Drosophila. , 1996, Development.
[62] R. Kelley,et al. Equality for X Chromosomes , 1995, Science.
[63] E. Knust,et al. Expression of crumbs confers apical character on plasma membrane domains of ectodermal epithelia of drosophila , 1995, Cell.
[64] J. Gergen,et al. The Drosophila segmentation gene runt acts as a position-specific numerator element necessary for the uniform expression of the sex-determining gene Sex-lethal. , 1991, Genes & development.
[65] L. Sánchez,et al. The sisterless-b function of the Drosophila gene scute is restricted to the stage when the X:A ratio determines the activity of Sex-lethal. , 1991, Development.
[66] L. Bell,et al. Developmental distribution of female-specific Sex-lethal proteins in Drosophila melanogaster. , 1991, Genes & development.
[67] R. Shine. Proximate Determinants of Sexual Differences in Adult Body Size , 1990, The American Naturalist.
[68] E. Temeles,et al. The evolution of sexual dimorphism in animals: Hypotheses and tests. , 1989, Trends in ecology & evolution.
[69] B. S. Baker,et al. Drosophila doublesex gene controls somatic sexual differentiation by producing alternatively spliced mRNAs encoding related sex-specific polypeptides , 1989, Cell.
[70] L. Bell,et al. Sex-lethal, a Drosophila sex determination switch gene, exhibits sex-specific RNA splicing and sequence similarity to RNA binding proteins , 1988, Cell.
[71] T. Cline. Evidence that sisterless-a and sisterless-b are two of several discrete "numerator elements" of the X/A sex determination signal in Drosophila that switch Sxl between two alternative stable expression states. , 1988, Genetics.
[72] M. Mckeown,et al. Ectopic expression of the female transformer gene product leads to female differentiation of chromosomally male drosophila , 1988, Cell.
[73] W. Atchley,et al. Quantitative Genetics of Drosophila Melanogaster. II. Heritabilities and Genetic Correlations between Sexes for Head and Thorax Traits. , 1988, Genetics.
[74] B. S. Baker,et al. The control of alternative splicing at genes regulating sexual differentiation in D. melanogaster , 1988, Cell.
[75] T. Cline. Autoregulatory functioning of a Drosophila gene product that establish es and maintains the sexually determined state. , 1984, Genetics.
[76] M. Kuroda,et al. Dosage compensation in Drosophila. , 1983, Isozymes.
[77] D. B. Roberts,et al. The X-linked α-chain gene of Drosophila LSP-1 does not show dosage compensation , 1979, Nature.
[78] D. B. Roberts,et al. The X-linked alpha-chain gene of Drosophila LSP-1 does not show dosage compensation. , 1979, Nature.
[79] B. S. Baker,et al. Segmental aneuploidy and the genetic gross structure of the Drosophila genome. , 1972, Genetics.
[80] J. Lucchesi,et al. The role of sexuality in dosage compensation in Drosophila. , 1969, Genetics.
[81] R. King,et al. Studies on the Expression of the Transformer Gene of Drosophila Melanogaster. , 1961, Genetics.
[82] K. Bakker. FEEDING PERIOD, GROWTH, AND PUPATION IN LARVAE OFDROSOPHILA MELANOGASTER , 1959 .
[83] A. Sturtevant. A Gene in Drosophila Melanogaster That Transforms Females into Males. , 1945, Genetics.
[84] P. Pye-Smith. The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex , 1871, Nature.