| Literature DB >> 17883843 |
Hans Ellegren1, Lina Hultin-Rosenberg, Björn Brunström, Lennart Dencker, Kim Kultima, Birger Scholz.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The contrasting dose of sex chromosomes in males and females potentially introduces a large-scale imbalance in levels of gene expression between sexes, and between sex chromosomes and autosomes. In many organisms, dosage compensation has thus evolved to equalize sex-linked gene expression in males and females. In mammals this is achieved by X chromosome inactivation and in flies and worms by up- or down-regulation of X-linked expression, respectively. While otherwise widespread in systems with heteromorphic sex chromosomes, the case of dosage compensation in birds (males ZZ, females ZW) remains an unsolved enigma.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17883843 PMCID: PMC2099419 DOI: 10.1186/1741-7007-5-40
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biol ISSN: 1741-7007 Impact factor: 7.431
Genomic distribution of genes showing sex-biased expression in chicken at >1.5 fold-change and a corrected p < 0.05 (number of genes in parantheses)
| Z obs | Z exp | A obs | A exp | ||
| Female-biased | |||||
| Brain | 0.067 (1) | 0.048 | 0.933 (14) | 0.952 | NS |
| Gonads | 0.021 (28) | 0.051 | 0.979 (1278) | 0.949 | <0.0001 |
| Heart | 0.111 (3) | 0.048 | 0.889 (24) | 0.953 | NS |
| All tissues | 0.023 (31) | 0.050 | 0.977 (1341) | 0.950 | <0.0001 |
| Male-biased | |||||
| Brain | 0.905 (143) | 0.0480 | 0.095 (15) | 0.952 | <0.0001 |
| Gonads | 0.214 (263) | 0.051 | 0.786 (986) | 0.949 | <0.0001 |
| Heart | 0.877(121) | 0.048 | 0.123 (17) | 0.953 | <0.0001 |
| All tissues | 0.232 (305) | 0.050 | 0.768 (1009) | 0.950 | <0.0001 |
*Fisher's exact test. NS, not significant.
Figure 1Expression levels for individual Z-linked genes are higher in males than in females. Scatter plots of the relationship between log2 hybridization intensities of individual genes in (a) soma and (b) gonads of male and female chicken embryos. The red line corresponds to twofold higher hybridization intensity in males than in females.
Figure 2Higher fold-change expression sex difference for the Z chromsome than for individual autosomes. Box plots showing median of log2 male-to-female fold-change values per chromosome in (a) soma and (b) gonads. Boxes represent the mid 50% of the data (first and third quartiles) and whiskers extend to the minimum and maximum values that are not outliers (defined as >1.5 units away from first and third quartiles. Data from the Z chromosome is shown in red.
Figure 3The distribution of fold-change values differ between Z-linked and autosomal genes. Fold-change values for autosomal (black) and Z-linked (red) genes in (a) soma and (b) gonads. Note different scales on y axes in (a) and (b).
Figure 4Similar levels of male and female autosomal, and male but not female Z-linked, gene expression. Histograms of mean log2 hybridization intensities for all genes, and unbiased genes (<1.2 fold-change), in (a) soma and (b) gonads. Male autosomal genes are shown in blue and female genes in red, whereas Z-linked genes in males are shown in yellow and in females in green. Error bars correspond to 95% confidence intervals.