There are certain genes on the sex chromosome of
Drosophila
for which the female contains twice as many copies as the male. Some of the genes in this group produce the same phenotype in each sex despite the dosage difference and are said, therefore, to manifest dosage compensation. The structural genes for glucose-6-phosphate and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenases are located on the sex chromosome. We measured these enzyme activities in normal flies of each sex and in flies bearing fewer or extra copies of these genes.
Normal females (two-dose) had the same 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase activity as normal males (one-dose). One-dose females had reduced activity (0.61 of normal) and three-dose females or two-dose males had increased activity (about 1.3 of normal). Triploid females had the normal activity. Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity responded similarly to gene dosage. Neither activity responded to changes in the dosage of the gene for the other. These results are compatible with an interpretation whereby each activity is compensated by the products of at least two regulatory genes. One of these regulatory genes is probably sex-linked; the others may be sex-linked or autosomal.
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