Doublesex Explained

Uniprot:P23023
Organism:Drosophila melanogaster
Doublesex
Symbol:dsx

Doublesex (dsx) is a gene that is involved in the sex determination system of many insects including the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster.

Sex determination

The gene is expressed in both male and female flies and is subject to alternative splicing, producing the protein isoforms dsxf in females and the longer dsxm in males. The production of dsxf is caused by the presence of the female-specific version of the transformer (tra) gene.

In a sense, the isoform of dsx informs a cell about the organism's sex; for instance, female genitals only develop if dsxf is present. In conjunction with the gene fruitless, dsx also causes differences in the brain structure and behavior of males and females.[1]

Although the details of sex determination differ in the various species, there is a gene related to dsx in vertebrates (DMRT1) and in nematodes (MAB-3). All of these are transcription factors with a zinc finger DNA-binding domain (known as the DM domain) and are involved in sex-specific differentiation.

Notes and References

  1. Rideout EJ, Dornan AJ, Neville MC, Eadie S, Goodwin SF . Control of sexual differentiation and behavior by the doublesex gene in Drosophila melanogaster . Nature Neuroscience . 13 . 4 . 458–66 . April 2010 . 20305646 . 3092424 . 10.1038/nn.2515. Lay summary: Web site: 'Doublesex' gene key to determining fruit fly gender . . 2022-02-03 . 2022-02-05.