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Main Authors: Evans, Ben J, Gvoždík, Václav, Knytl, Martin, Cauret, Caroline M S, Herrel, Anthony, Greenbaum, Eli, Patel, Jay, Premachandra, Tharindu, Papenfuss, Theodore J, Parente, James, Horb, Marko E, Measey, John
Format: Artículo científico
Language:en
Published: Molecular biology and evolution 2024
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Online Access:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39665151/
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author Evans, Ben J
Gvoždík, Václav
Knytl, Martin
Cauret, Caroline M S
Herrel, Anthony
Greenbaum, Eli
Patel, Jay
Premachandra, Tharindu
Papenfuss, Theodore J
Parente, James
Horb, Marko E
Measey, John
author_facet Evans, Ben J
Gvoždík, Václav
Knytl, Martin
Cauret, Caroline M S
Herrel, Anthony
Greenbaum, Eli
Patel, Jay
Premachandra, Tharindu
Papenfuss, Theodore J
Parente, James
Horb, Marko E
Measey, John
Evans, Ben J
Gvoždík, Václav
Knytl, Martin
Cauret, Caroline M S
Herrel, Anthony
Greenbaum, Eli
Patel, Jay
Premachandra, Tharindu
Papenfuss, Theodore J
Parente, James
Horb, Marko E
Measey, John
collection PubMed - marine biology
contents Rapid Sex Chromosome Turnover in African Clawed Frogs (Xenopus) and the Origins of New Sex Chromosomes. Evans, Ben J Gvoždík, Václav Knytl, Martin Cauret, Caroline M S Herrel, Anthony Greenbaum, Eli Patel, Jay Premachandra, Tharindu Papenfuss, Theodore J Parente, James Horb, Marko E Measey, John Animals Xenopus Sex Chromosomes Female Male Recombination, Genetic Sex Determination Processes Sex chromosomes of some closely related species are not homologous, and sex chromosome turnover is often attributed to mechanisms that involve linkage to or recombination arrest around sex-determining loci. We examined sex chromosome turnover and recombination landscapes in African clawed frogs (genus Xenopus) with reduced representation genome sequences from 929 individuals from 19 species. We recovered extensive variation in sex chromosomes, including at least eight nonhomologous sex-associated regions-five newly reported here, with most maintaining female heterogamety, but two independent origins of Y chromosomes. Seven of these regions are found in allopolyploid species in the subgenus Xenopus, and all of these reside in one of their two subgenomes, which highlights functional asymmetry between subgenomes. In three species with chromosome-scale genome assemblies (Xenopus borealis, Xenopus laevis, and Xenopus tropicalis), sex-specific recombination landscapes have similar patterns of sex differences in rates and locations of recombination. Across these Xenopus species, sex-associated regions are significantly nearer chromosome ends than expected by chance, even though this is where the ancestral recombination rate is highest in both sexes before the regions became sex associated. As well, expansions of sex-associated recombination arrest occurred multiple times. New information on sex linkage along with among-species variation in female specificity of the sex-determining gene dm-w argues against a "jumping gene" model, where dm-w moves around the genome. The diversity of sex chromosomes in Xenopus raises questions about the roles of natural and sexual selection, polyploidy, the recombination landscape, and neutral processes in driving sex chromosome turnover in animal groups with mostly heterogametic females.
format Artículo científico
id pubmed_39665151
institution PubMed
language en
publishDate 2024
publisher Molecular biology and evolution
record_format pubmed
spellingShingle Rapid Sex Chromosome Turnover in African Clawed Frogs (Xenopus) and the Origins of New Sex Chromosomes.
Evans, Ben J
Gvoždík, Václav
Knytl, Martin
Cauret, Caroline M S
Herrel, Anthony
Greenbaum, Eli
Patel, Jay
Premachandra, Tharindu
Papenfuss, Theodore J
Parente, James
Horb, Marko E
Measey, John
Animals
Xenopus
Sex Chromosomes
Female
Male
Recombination, Genetic
Sex Determination Processes
Rapid Sex Chromosome Turnover in African Clawed Frogs (Xenopus) and the Origins of New Sex Chromosomes. Evans, Ben J Gvoždík, Václav Knytl, Martin Cauret, Caroline M S Herrel, Anthony Greenbaum, Eli Patel, Jay Premachandra, Tharindu Papenfuss, Theodore J Parente, James Horb, Marko E Measey, John Animals Xenopus Sex Chromosomes Female Male Recombination, Genetic Sex Determination Processes Sex chromosomes of some closely related species are not homologous, and sex chromosome turnover is often attributed to mechanisms that involve linkage to or recombination arrest around sex-determining loci. We examined sex chromosome turnover and recombination landscapes in African clawed frogs (genus Xenopus) with reduced representation genome sequences from 929 individuals from 19 species. We recovered extensive variation in sex chromosomes, including at least eight nonhomologous sex-associated regions-five newly reported here, with most maintaining female heterogamety, but two independent origins of Y chromosomes. Seven of these regions are found in allopolyploid species in the subgenus Xenopus, and all of these reside in one of their two subgenomes, which highlights functional asymmetry between subgenomes. In three species with chromosome-scale genome assemblies (Xenopus borealis, Xenopus laevis, and Xenopus tropicalis), sex-specific recombination landscapes have similar patterns of sex differences in rates and locations of recombination. Across these Xenopus species, sex-associated regions are significantly nearer chromosome ends than expected by chance, even though this is where the ancestral recombination rate is highest in both sexes before the regions became sex associated. As well, expansions of sex-associated recombination arrest occurred multiple times. New information on sex linkage along with among-species variation in female specificity of the sex-determining gene dm-w argues against a "jumping gene" model, where dm-w moves around the genome. The diversity of sex chromosomes in Xenopus raises questions about the roles of natural and sexual selection, polyploidy, the recombination landscape, and neutral processes in driving sex chromosome turnover in animal groups with mostly heterogametic females.
title Rapid Sex Chromosome Turnover in African Clawed Frogs (Xenopus) and the Origins of New Sex Chromosomes.
topic Animals
Xenopus
Sex Chromosomes
Female
Male
Recombination, Genetic
Sex Determination Processes
url https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39665151/