Male-specific expression of the protein male-specific-lethal
2 (MSL-2) controls dosage compensation in Drosophila.
msl-2 gene expression is inhibited in females
by Sex-lethal (SXL), an RNA binding protein known to regulate
pre-mRNA splicing. An intron present at the 5′ untranslated
region (UTR) of msl-2 mRNA contains putative SXL
binding sites and is retained in female flies. Here we
show that SXL plays a dual role in the inhibition of msl-2
expression. Cotransfection of Drosophila Schneider
cells with an SXL expression vector and a reporter containing
the 5′ UTR of msl-2 mRNA resulted in retention
of the 5′ UTR intron and efficient accumulation of
the unspliced mRNA in the cytoplasm, where its translation
was blocked by SXL, but not by the intron per se. Both
splicing and translation inhibition by SXL were recapitulated
in vitro and found to be dependent upon SXL binding to
high-affinity sites within the intron, showing that SXL
directly regulates these events. Our data reveal a coordinated
mechanism for the regulation of msl-2 expression
by the same regulatory factor: SXL enforces intron retention
in the nucleus and subsequent translation inhibition in
the cytoplasm.