Sequencing papaya X and Yh chromosomes reveals molecular basis of incipient sex chromosome evolution

Autor: Ray Ming, Jennifer Han, Paul H. Moore, Jiming Jiang, Cornelia Lemke, Ming Li Wang, Rafael Navajas-Pérez, Rishi Aryal, Ching Man Wai, Andrea R. Gschwend, Fanchang Zeng, Jianping Wang, F. Alex Feltus, Robert VanBuren, Cuixia Chen, Eric J. Tong, Jan E. Murray, Maqsudul Alam, Qingyi Yu, Wenli Zhang, Jong Kuk Na, Deborah Charlesworth, Ratnesh Singh, Xiang Jia Min, Andrew H. Paterson
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2012
Předmět:
Popis: Sex determination in papaya is controlled by a recently evolved XY chromosome pair, with two slightly different Y chromosomes controlling the development of males (Y) and hermaphrodites (Y h ). To study the events of early sex chromosome evolution, we sequenced the hermaphrodite-specific region of the Y h chromosome (HSY) and its X counterpart, yielding an 8.1-megabase (Mb) HSY pseudomolecule, and a 3.5-Mb sequence for the corresponding X region. The HSY is larger than the X region, mostly due to retrotransposon insertions. The papaya HSY differs from the X region by two large-scale inversions, the first of which likely caused the recombination suppression between the X and Y h chromosomes, followed by numerous additional chromosomal rearrangements. Altogether, including the X and/or HSY regions, 124 transcription units were annotated, including 50 functional pairs present in both the X and HSY. Ten HSY genes had functional homologs elsewhere in the papaya autosomal regions, suggesting movement of genes onto the HSY, whereas the X region had none. Sequence divergence between 70 transcripts shared by the X and HSY revealed two evolutionary strata in the X chromosome, corresponding to the two inversions on the HSY, the older of which evolved about 7.0 million years ago. Gene content differences between the HSY and X are greatest in the older stratum, whereas the gene content and order of the collinear regions are identical. Our findings support theoretical models of early sex chromosome evolution.
Databáze: OpenAIRE