[
Neuron,
2002]
Cyclic GMP-dependent protein kinase (PKG) has been implicated in the regulation of diverse aspects of vertebrate and insect behavior, yet the mechanisms underlying these effects are poorly understood. In this issue of Neuron, Fujiwara et al. and L'Etoile et al. address the neural basis for PKG function in C. elegans and demonstrate the power of behavioral genetic analysis in simple systems in the elucidation of neuronal signaling mechanisms in vivo.
[
Genes Dev,
2002]
The CM domain is a cysteine-rich DNA-binding motif first recognized in proteins encoded by the Drosophila set determination gene doublesex (Erdman and Burtis 1993; Zhu et al. 2000). As the name doublesex (dsx) suggests, this gene has functions in both sexes: Its transcripts undergo sex-specific alternative splicing, so that it can encode either a male-specific isoform, DSX(M), or a female-specific isoform, DSX(F) (Baker and Wolfner 1988; Burtis and Baker 1989). These proteins have the same N-terminal DNA-binding domain, but different C termini that confer different regulatory properties on the two forms. The expression of DSX(M) directs male development, and the expression of DSX(F) directs female development, throughout most of the somatic tissues of the fruit fly.