eLife (Jun 2013)

miR-124 controls male reproductive success in Drosophila

  • Ruifen Weng,
  • Jacqueline SR Chin,
  • Joanne Y Yew,
  • Natascha Bushati,
  • Stephen M Cohen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.00640
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2

Abstract

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Many aspects of social behavior are controlled by sex-specific pheromones. Gender-appropriate production of the sexually dimorphic transcription factors doublesex and fruitless controls sexual differentiation and sexual behavior. miR-124 mutant males exhibited increased male–male courtship and reduced reproductive success with females. Females showed a strong preference for wild-type males over miR-124 mutant males when given a choice of mates. These effects were traced to aberrant pheromone production. We identified the sex-specific splicing factor transformer as a functionally significant target of miR-124 in this context, suggesting a role for miR-124 in the control of male sexual differentiation and behavior, by limiting inappropriate expression of the female form of transformer. miR-124 is required to ensure fidelity of gender-appropriate pheromone production in males. Use of a microRNA provides a secondary means of controlling the cascade of sex-specific splicing events that controls sexual differentiation in Drosophila.

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