{"title":"Female heterogamety (ZW systems) in 22% of flowering plants with sex chromosomes: Theoretical expectations and correlates","authors":"Susanne S. Renner","doi":"10.1002/ajb2.70006","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Genetic sex determination usually involves males and females that differ in their gametes, with one sex producing two types of gametes, the other a single type. When females produce two types, this is called female heterogamety and the sex chromosomes are denoted Z and W, while the reverse is male heterogamety, with the sex chromosomes denoted X and Y (Muller, <span>1915</span>). Sex chromosomes can only occur in separate-sexed species, but inferring which sex is heterogametic can be difficult (Correns, <span>1917</span>; Westergaard, <span>1958</span>). Here I present a compilation of plant species with ZW sex chromosomes and briefly relate findings from plants to those from animals and to theoretical expectations about genetic degeneration and ecological correlates of female heterogamety. This seems relevant because theoretical studies are handicapped by the assumption that ZW sex chromosome systems are extremely rare (e.g., Marais and Lemaitre, <span>2022</span>; Lesaffre et al., <span>2024</span>).</p><p>In land plants, female heterogamety is only known from flowering plants. This is surprising because almost half of all gymnosperms are dioecious (all 337 species of cycads, <i>Ginkgo bilob</i>a, all 70 species of Gnetales, and a few conifers) and likely have sex chromosomes. In bryophytes, male or female heterogamety is not possible because the sexual generation is haploid, and unisexual plants thus have either a U or a V chromosome, but never both. Ferns and lycophytes have few sexually specialized species (Renner, <span>2014</span>).</p><p>Female heterogamety was discovered in chickens and a magpie moth (Muller, <span>1915</span>), and today we know that this type of sex determination characterizes most birds (10,000 species), butterflies and moths (perhaps 180,000 species), snakes (perhaps 4000 species), and many fish and amphibians. Some fish, such as <i>Xiphophorus maculatus</i>, have strains in which the females are the heterogametic sex and others in which the males are heterogametic (Kallman, <span>1965</span>). Frog species also can have W, Z, and Y sex chromosomes in different populations (e.g., Ezaz et al., <span>2006</span>; Furman et al., <span>2020</span>).</p><p>The first plant ZW systems were inferred at the same time as those in animals, using experimental interspecific crossings and resulting sex ratios, not microscopy. These first experiments focused on <i>Fragaria chiloensis</i> and <i>F. virginiana</i> (Muller, <span>1915</span> interpreting experiments by Richardson, <span>1914</span>).</p><p>My compilation (Table 1) updates a database of green plants with sex chromosomes that includes 124 angiosperms with male heterogamety and 33 with female heterogamety (Garcia et al., <span>2023</span>). These lists of ZW species differ because of corrections and additions, which are coming rapidly because of genomic research. How many of the approximately 15,600 dioecious angiosperms (Renner, <span>2014</span>) may have XY or ZW systems could be extrapolated if the 157 so-far known species with sex chromosomes were a random sample. This seems unlikely, however, because dioecy is concentrated among tropical tree families, while research has concentrated on Northern Hemisphere herbs and shrubs. In some genera, such as <i>Populus</i>, <i>Salix</i>, and <i>Silene</i>, both XY and ZW systems occur in closely related species although not in populations of the same species (Balounova et al., <span>2019</span>; Li et al., <span>2022</span>; Wang et al., <span>2024</span>), and this is another reason why extrapolation may be risky. Nevertheless, as of this writing, 34 species in 14 genera (Table 1), that is, 22%, of 157 flowering plants known to have sex chromosomes have ZW systems.</p><p>The origin of ZW chromosomes is perhaps best understood in <i>Fragaria</i>, where a female-specific region of DNA is associated with sex and has repeatedly changed its genomic location, each time increasing the size of the hemizygous female-specific sequence on the W sex chromosome (Tennessen et al., <span>2018</span>). Plant sex regions can thus ‘jump’, locking new genes into linkage with sex. Switches between ZW and XY systems are known from genomic studies in <i>Salix</i> and <i>Populus</i>. An example is <i>S. babylonica</i>, a hybrid species that has a ZW sex chromosome system with a sex-determining region on Chrom15, likely by an ancestral Y chromosome becoming the Z chromosome of the hybrid, while the ancestral X became the W chromosome (Wang et al., <span>2024</span>). In <i>Populus</i> sect. <i>Populus</i>, an XY system of sex determination, which is found in <i>P. tremula</i> and <i>P. tremuloides</i>, likely re-evolved from the ZW system present in <i>P. alba, P. adenopoda</i>, and <i>P. qiongdaoensis</i> (Kim et al., <span>2021</span>). Evolutionary transitions have also been inferred in <i>Silene</i> section <i>Otites</i>, albeit not yet using phased chromosome-level genomes (Balounova et al., <span>2019</span>).</p><p>Given that at least 34 flowering plants have ZW sex chromosomes (Table 1), three proposed hypotheses about ZW systems in principle might be tested. First, data from animals suggest that the heterogametic sex has a shorter life span than the homogametic sex (Marais and Lemaitre, 2022). For example, in XY systems, males should express deleterious mutations on their single X chromosome (the so-called toxic X). The expectation of a reduced lifespan in the heterogametic sex has been tested for plants, but the study lacked statistical power because of the small number of ZW systems included, namely eight ZW species of which some remain doubtful (<i>Buchloe dactyloides</i>, <i>Distichlis spicata</i>, <i>Simarouba glauca</i>). With the new compilation, which includes three ZW species with heteromorphic sex chromosomes (Table 1), the hypothesis might be retested.</p><p>Second, Lessafre et al. (2024) suggested that XY systems are more likely to evolve when dioecy is a mechanism of inbreeding avoidance, while ZW systems are more likely to evolve when inbreeding depression is not a key factor in the evolution of dioecy and sex chromosomes. Testing this hypothesis requires finding suitable sets of XY and ZW systems with population-genetic data on inbreeding, although this will be difficult because of great phylogenetic distances among potential study species (Table 1).</p><p>Third, the expected increased efficacy of selection on pollen tubes growing through stylar tissue in XY systems, in which there is an X-carrying and a Y-carrying pollen tube compared to ZW systems, in which both tubes carry a Z chromosome (Correns, <span>1917</span>, <span>1922</span>; Westergaard, <span>1958</span>; Beaudry et al., <span>2020</span>; Figure 1), might be tested by comparing ZW and XY species with heteromorphic sex chromosomes.</p><p>Models and theories are useful, but rely heavily on simplifying assumptions, especially concerning the genetics of sex determination. Because we are only starting to understand sex determination pathways in plants, the frequencies of the three sex chromosome systems known in land plants (XY, ZW, and UV) will change, and according to what we will find, models may or may not apply.</p>","PeriodicalId":7691,"journal":{"name":"American Journal of Botany","volume":"112 3","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":2.4000,"publicationDate":"2025-02-20","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/ajb2.70006","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"American Journal of Botany","FirstCategoryId":"99","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ajb2.70006","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"生物学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"PLANT SCIENCES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Genetic sex determination usually involves males and females that differ in their gametes, with one sex producing two types of gametes, the other a single type. When females produce two types, this is called female heterogamety and the sex chromosomes are denoted Z and W, while the reverse is male heterogamety, with the sex chromosomes denoted X and Y (Muller, 1915). Sex chromosomes can only occur in separate-sexed species, but inferring which sex is heterogametic can be difficult (Correns, 1917; Westergaard, 1958). Here I present a compilation of plant species with ZW sex chromosomes and briefly relate findings from plants to those from animals and to theoretical expectations about genetic degeneration and ecological correlates of female heterogamety. This seems relevant because theoretical studies are handicapped by the assumption that ZW sex chromosome systems are extremely rare (e.g., Marais and Lemaitre, 2022; Lesaffre et al., 2024).
In land plants, female heterogamety is only known from flowering plants. This is surprising because almost half of all gymnosperms are dioecious (all 337 species of cycads, Ginkgo biloba, all 70 species of Gnetales, and a few conifers) and likely have sex chromosomes. In bryophytes, male or female heterogamety is not possible because the sexual generation is haploid, and unisexual plants thus have either a U or a V chromosome, but never both. Ferns and lycophytes have few sexually specialized species (Renner, 2014).
Female heterogamety was discovered in chickens and a magpie moth (Muller, 1915), and today we know that this type of sex determination characterizes most birds (10,000 species), butterflies and moths (perhaps 180,000 species), snakes (perhaps 4000 species), and many fish and amphibians. Some fish, such as Xiphophorus maculatus, have strains in which the females are the heterogametic sex and others in which the males are heterogametic (Kallman, 1965). Frog species also can have W, Z, and Y sex chromosomes in different populations (e.g., Ezaz et al., 2006; Furman et al., 2020).
The first plant ZW systems were inferred at the same time as those in animals, using experimental interspecific crossings and resulting sex ratios, not microscopy. These first experiments focused on Fragaria chiloensis and F. virginiana (Muller, 1915 interpreting experiments by Richardson, 1914).
My compilation (Table 1) updates a database of green plants with sex chromosomes that includes 124 angiosperms with male heterogamety and 33 with female heterogamety (Garcia et al., 2023). These lists of ZW species differ because of corrections and additions, which are coming rapidly because of genomic research. How many of the approximately 15,600 dioecious angiosperms (Renner, 2014) may have XY or ZW systems could be extrapolated if the 157 so-far known species with sex chromosomes were a random sample. This seems unlikely, however, because dioecy is concentrated among tropical tree families, while research has concentrated on Northern Hemisphere herbs and shrubs. In some genera, such as Populus, Salix, and Silene, both XY and ZW systems occur in closely related species although not in populations of the same species (Balounova et al., 2019; Li et al., 2022; Wang et al., 2024), and this is another reason why extrapolation may be risky. Nevertheless, as of this writing, 34 species in 14 genera (Table 1), that is, 22%, of 157 flowering plants known to have sex chromosomes have ZW systems.
The origin of ZW chromosomes is perhaps best understood in Fragaria, where a female-specific region of DNA is associated with sex and has repeatedly changed its genomic location, each time increasing the size of the hemizygous female-specific sequence on the W sex chromosome (Tennessen et al., 2018). Plant sex regions can thus ‘jump’, locking new genes into linkage with sex. Switches between ZW and XY systems are known from genomic studies in Salix and Populus. An example is S. babylonica, a hybrid species that has a ZW sex chromosome system with a sex-determining region on Chrom15, likely by an ancestral Y chromosome becoming the Z chromosome of the hybrid, while the ancestral X became the W chromosome (Wang et al., 2024). In Populus sect. Populus, an XY system of sex determination, which is found in P. tremula and P. tremuloides, likely re-evolved from the ZW system present in P. alba, P. adenopoda, and P. qiongdaoensis (Kim et al., 2021). Evolutionary transitions have also been inferred in Silene section Otites, albeit not yet using phased chromosome-level genomes (Balounova et al., 2019).
Given that at least 34 flowering plants have ZW sex chromosomes (Table 1), three proposed hypotheses about ZW systems in principle might be tested. First, data from animals suggest that the heterogametic sex has a shorter life span than the homogametic sex (Marais and Lemaitre, 2022). For example, in XY systems, males should express deleterious mutations on their single X chromosome (the so-called toxic X). The expectation of a reduced lifespan in the heterogametic sex has been tested for plants, but the study lacked statistical power because of the small number of ZW systems included, namely eight ZW species of which some remain doubtful (Buchloe dactyloides, Distichlis spicata, Simarouba glauca). With the new compilation, which includes three ZW species with heteromorphic sex chromosomes (Table 1), the hypothesis might be retested.
Second, Lessafre et al. (2024) suggested that XY systems are more likely to evolve when dioecy is a mechanism of inbreeding avoidance, while ZW systems are more likely to evolve when inbreeding depression is not a key factor in the evolution of dioecy and sex chromosomes. Testing this hypothesis requires finding suitable sets of XY and ZW systems with population-genetic data on inbreeding, although this will be difficult because of great phylogenetic distances among potential study species (Table 1).
Third, the expected increased efficacy of selection on pollen tubes growing through stylar tissue in XY systems, in which there is an X-carrying and a Y-carrying pollen tube compared to ZW systems, in which both tubes carry a Z chromosome (Correns, 1917, 1922; Westergaard, 1958; Beaudry et al., 2020; Figure 1), might be tested by comparing ZW and XY species with heteromorphic sex chromosomes.
Models and theories are useful, but rely heavily on simplifying assumptions, especially concerning the genetics of sex determination. Because we are only starting to understand sex determination pathways in plants, the frequencies of the three sex chromosome systems known in land plants (XY, ZW, and UV) will change, and according to what we will find, models may or may not apply.
期刊介绍:
The American Journal of Botany (AJB), the flagship journal of the Botanical Society of America (BSA), publishes peer-reviewed, innovative, significant research of interest to a wide audience of plant scientists in all areas of plant biology (structure, function, development, diversity, genetics, evolution, systematics), all levels of organization (molecular to ecosystem), and all plant groups and allied organisms (cyanobacteria, algae, fungi, and lichens). AJB requires authors to frame their research questions and discuss their results in terms of major questions of plant biology. In general, papers that are too narrowly focused, purely descriptive, natural history, broad surveys, or that contain only preliminary data will not be considered.