鸟类性染色体扩增支持脊椎动物性染色体的重复进化

Proceedings of the Royal Society B Pub Date : 2019-12-04 Epub Date: 2019-11-27 DOI:10.1098/rspb.2019.2051
Hanna Sigeman, Suvi Ponnikas, Pallavi Chauhan, Elisa Dierickx, M de L Brooke, Bengt Hansson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在脊椎动物中,性染色体多次从相同的常染色体进化而来,这表明抑制重组的选择在某些遗传背景中反复独立地发挥作用。在本文中,我们对一个鸟类支系(云雀及其姊妹系;云雀科和豹科)进行了比较基因组学研究,在该支系中,多个常染色体-性染色体融合似乎形成了扩展的性染色体。我们检测到了已知最大的鸟类性染色体(195.3 Mbp),并证明它源自四条鸟类染色体的融合:Z、3、4A 和 5。在这四条染色体中,我们发现了五个进化层的证据,在这些进化层中,重组在不同的时间点受到抑制。接着,我们分析了染色体的内容,发现第 3 号染色体明显富集了具有预测的性别相关功能的基因。最后,我们展示了与其他脊椎动物性染色体的广泛同源性:在鱼类(Z)、龟鳖类(Z,5)、蜥蜴类(Z,4A)、哺乳类(Z,4A)和蛙类(Z,3,4A,5)中,染色体 Z、3、4A 和 5 已独立进化为性染色体。我们的研究结果为脊椎动物性染色体的重复进化提供了见解和支持。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Repeated sex chromosome evolution in vertebrates supported by expanded avian sex chromosomes.

Sex chromosomes have evolved from the same autosomes multiple times across vertebrates, suggesting that selection for recombination suppression has acted repeatedly and independently on certain genetic backgrounds. Here, we perform comparative genomics of a bird clade (larks and their sister lineage; Alaudidae and Panuridae) where multiple autosome-sex chromosome fusions appear to have formed expanded sex chromosomes. We detected the largest known avian sex chromosome (195.3 Mbp) and show that it originates from fusions between parts of four avian chromosomes: Z, 3, 4A and 5. Within these four chromosomes, we found evidence of five evolutionary strata where recombination had been suppressed at different time points, and show that stratum age explained the divergence rate of Z-W gametologs. Next, we analysed chromosome content and found that chromosome 3 was significantly enriched for genes with predicted sex-related functions. Finally, we demonstrate extensive homology to sex chromosomes in other vertebrate lineages: chromosomes Z, 3, 4A and 5 have independently evolved into sex chromosomes in fish (Z), turtles (Z, 5), lizards (Z, 4A), mammals (Z, 4A) and frogs (Z, 3, 4A, 5). Our results provide insights into and support for repeated evolution of sex chromosomes in vertebrates.

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