| Literature DB >> 21235773 |
Sara Naurin1, Bengt Hansson, Dennis Hasselquist, Yong-Hwan Kim, Staffan Bensch.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite virtually identical DNA sequences between the sexes, sexual dimorphism is a widespread phenomenon in nature. To a large extent the systematic differences between the sexes must therefore arise from processes involving gene regulation. In accordance, sexual dimorphism in gene expression is common and extensive. Genes with sexually dimorphic regulation are known to evolve rapidly, both in DNA sequence and in gene expression profile. Studies of gene expression in related species can shed light on the flexibility, or degree of conservation, of the gene expression profiles underlying sexual dimorphism.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21235773 PMCID: PMC3036617 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-12-37
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Figure 1Gene expression signals in males versus females. Female gene expression signal versus male signal for all ESTs on the Lund-zf array in (a): the zebra finch and (b): the common whitethroat.
Numbers of sex-biased ESTs and genes identified
| ESTs | non-redundant genes | % of all sex-biased ESTs | % of all sex-biased genes | mean FC non-redundant genes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zebra Finch | |||||
| male-biased genes | 460 | 383 | 90 | 95 | 1.08 |
| female-biased genes | 49 | 19 | 9.6 | 4.7 | 0.77 |
| Common Whitethroat | |||||
| male-biased genes | 318 | 271 | 92 | 94 | 1.32 |
| female-biased genes | 27 | 16 | 7.8 | 5.6 | 0.66 |
A total of 509 ESTs corresponding to 417 genes were identified in the zebra finch, and 345 ESTs corresponding to 299 genes in the common whitethroat.
Figure 2Histogram showing the observed and expected genomic distribution of sex-biased genes. The number of sex-biased genes for each chromosomal category in (a) zebra finch and (b) common whitethroat. Annotations achieved by BLASTs of the EST sequences on the array against the zebra finch sequence assembly (build 3.2.4). Significant hits have a hit of E = 10-20 or lower, and "no annotation" indicates that the EST sequence has either a significant hit against TguUnknown or no significant hit against any of the zebra finch chromosomes. Numbers above bars represent number of genes in each category.
Fisher exact test of genomic distributions
| zebra finch observed | common whitethroat observed | Expected if distribution was random | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Z-linked | 0.777 (7) | 0.056 (1) | 0.056 |
| Autosomal | 0.222 (2) | 0.944 (11) | 0.944 |
| p value Fisher exact test | 0.0055 | NS | |
| Z-linked | 0.975 (351) | 0.895 (231) | 0.056 |
| Autosomal | 0.0025 (9) | 0.105 (27) | 0.944 |
| p value Fisher exact test | 1.30E-165 | 3.00E-94 |
Observed and expected genomic distribution of all annotated sex-biased genes that show non-ambiguous regulation. Number of genes in parentheses.
Figure 3Genomic distributions of species specific sex-biased genes and of genes sex-biased in both species. Chromosome annotation of (a) the 212 genes which were sex-biased only in the zebra finch, (b) the 93 genes that were sex-biased only in the common whitethroat and (c) the 205 genes that were sex-biased in both species.