The Drosophila sex determination gene Sex-lethal controls its own expression and the expression of downstream target genes such as transformer by regulating RNA splicing. Genetic and molecular studies have established that Sxl requires the product of another gene, snf, to autoregulate the splicing of its own transcripts. snf has recently been shown to encode a Drosophila U1 and U2 small nuclear ribonucleoprotein particle protein.In the work reported here, we demonstrate that the Sxl and Snf proteins can interact directly in vitro and that these two proteins are part of an RNase-sensitive complex in vivo which can be immunoprecipitated with the Sxl antibody. Unlike bulk Snf protein, which sediments slowly in sucrose gradients, the Snf protein associated with Sxl is in a large, rapidly sedimenting complex. Detailed characterization of the Sxl-Snf complexes from cross-linked extracts indicates that these complexes contain additional small nuclear ribonucleoprotein particle proteins and the U1 and U2 small nuclear RNAs. Finally, consistent with the RNase sensitivity of the Sxl-Snf complexes, Sxl transcripts can also be immunoprecipitated by Sxl antibodies. On the basis of the physical interactions between Sxl and Snf, we present a model for Sxl splicing regulation. This model helps explain how the Sxl protein is able to promote the sex-specific splicing of Sxl transcripts, utilizing target sequences that are distant from the regulated splice sites.In the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster, the activity state of the binary switch gene, Sex-lethal (Sxl), is set early in development in response to the primary sex determination signal, the X chromosome-to-autosome ratio (15,17,20,32). Sxl is turned on in 2X/2A animals (females) by activating a posttranscriptional autoregulatory feedback loop (4,14). In this feedback loop, Sxl proteins promote their own synthesis by directing the female-specific splicing of Sxl transcripts originating from the Sxl maintenance promoter, Sxl-Pm (4). This autoregulatory feedback loop is responsible for maintaining the female-determined state during most of development. The Sxl autoregulatory feedback loop is not activated in 1X/2A animals (males), and Sxl-Pm transcripts are spliced in the nonproductive default mode. The critical difference between the Sxl mRNAs in the two sexes is the male-specific exon, L3 (Fig. 1). This exon contains in-frame translation stop signals that prematurely truncate an open reading frame which begins in exon L2 (5). Exon L3 is included in all male Sxl mRNAs, and these RNAs encode only very short, presumably nonfunctional polypeptides. In females, the Sxl protein mediates the skipping of the male exon, joining exon L2 to L4. This joining creates a long open frame which is predicted to encode protein species with sizes of about 35 kDa that contain two RNA recognition motif (RRM) domains (48,50).Sxl controls sexual differentiation by regulating gene cascades specifying different aspects of somatic sexual development (3, 28, 41). The best understood cascade is the tr...