Literature DB >> 22083302

Is the Y chromosome disappearing?--both sides of the argument.

Darren K Griffin1.   

Abstract

On August 31, 2011 at the 18th International Chromosome Conference in Manchester, Jenny Graves took on Jenn Hughes to debate the demise (or otherwise) of the mammalian Y chromosome. Sex chromosome evolution is an example of convergence; there are numerous examples of XY and ZW systems with varying degrees of differentiation and isolated examples of the Y disappearing in some lineages. It is agreed that the Y was once genetically identical to its partner and that the present-day human sex chromosomes retain only traces of their shared ancestry. The euchromatic portion of the male-specific region of the Y is ~1/6 of the size of the X and has only ~1/12 the number of genes. The big question however is whether this degradation will continue or whether it has reached a point of equilibrium. Jenny Graves argued that the Y chromosome is subject to higher rates of variation and inefficient selection and that Ys (and Ws) degrade inexorably. She argued that there is evidence that the Y in other mammals has undergone lineage-specific degradation and already disappeared in some rodent lineages. She also pointed out that there is practically nothing left of the original human Y and the added part of the human Y is degrading rapidly. Jenn Hughes on the other hand argued that the Y has not disappeared yet and it has been around for hundreds of millions of years. She stated that it has shown that it can outsmart genetic decay in the absence of "normal" recombination and that most of its genes on the human Y exhibit signs of purifying selection. She noted that it has added at least eight different genes, many of which have subsequently expanded in copy number, and that it has not lost any genes since the human and chimpanzee diverged ~6 million years ago. The issue was put to the vote with an exact 50/50 split among the opinion of the audience; an interesting (though perhaps not entirely unexpected) skew however was noted in the sex ratio of those for and against the notion.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22083302     DOI: 10.1007/s10577-011-9252-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Chromosome Res        ISSN: 0967-3849            Impact factor:   5.239


  45 in total

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Authors:  P A Lingenfelter; M L Delbridge; S Thomas; H E Hoekstra; M J Mitchell; J A Graves; C M Disteche
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2.  Early origins of the X and Y chromosomes: lessons from tilapia.

Authors:  D K Griffin; S C Harvey; R Campos-Ramos; L-J Ayling; N R Bromage; J S Masabanda; D J Penman
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Review 3.  Weird animal genomes and the evolution of vertebrate sex and sex chromosomes.

Authors:  Jennifer A Marshall Graves
Journal:  Annu Rev Genet       Date:  2008       Impact factor: 16.830

4.  Karyotype evolution in Tilapia: mitotic and meiotic chromosome analysis of Oreochromis karongae and O. niloticus x O. karongae hybrids.

Authors:  S C Harvey; R Campos-Ramos; D D Kennedy; M T Ezaz; N R Bromage; D K Griffin; D J Penman
Journal:  Genetica       Date:  2002-06       Impact factor: 1.082

5.  Identification of putative sex chromosomes in the blue tilapia, Oreochromis aureus, through synaptonemal complex and FISH analysis.

Authors:  R Campos-Ramos; S C Harvey; J S Masabanda; L A Carrasco; D K Griffin; B J McAndrew; N R Bromage; D J Penman
Journal:  Genetica       Date:  2001       Impact factor: 1.082

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Authors:  Gabriel A B Marais; Paulo R A Campos; Isabel Gordo
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9.  Turnover of sex chromosomes in the stickleback fishes (gasterosteidae).

Authors:  Joseph A Ross; James R Urton; Jessica Boland; Michael D Shapiro; Catherine L Peichel
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  10 in total

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Review 2.  Avian sex, sex chromosomes, and dosage compensation in the age of genomics.

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Journal:  Chromosome Res       Date:  2014-04       Impact factor: 5.239

Review 3.  Should Y stay or should Y go: the evolution of non-recombining sex chromosomes.

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Journal:  Bioessays       Date:  2012-09-05       Impact factor: 4.345

4.  Assembly of the threespine stickleback Y chromosome reveals convergent signatures of sex chromosome evolution.

Authors:  Catherine L Peichel; Shaugnessy R McCann; Joseph A Ross; Alice F S Naftaly; James R Urton; Jennifer N Cech; Jane Grimwood; Jeremy Schmutz; Richard M Myers; David M Kingsley; Michael A White
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5.  Mobile elements contribute to the uniqueness of human genome with 15,000 human-specific insertions and 14 Mbp sequence increase.

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6.  Reorganization of the Y Chromosomes Enhances Divergence in Israeli Mole Rats Nannospalax ehrenbergi (Spalacidae, Rodentia): Comparative Analysis of Meiotic and Mitotic Chromosomes.

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Review 7.  Sex and the TEs: transposable elements in sexual development and function in animals.

Authors:  Corentin Dechaud; Jean-Nicolas Volff; Manfred Schartl; Magali Naville
Journal:  Mob DNA       Date:  2019-11-03

8.  Tracking the evolution of sex chromosome systems in Melanoplinae grasshoppers through chromosomal mapping of repetitive DNA sequences.

Authors:  Octavio M Palacios-Gimenez; Elio R Castillo; Dardo A Martí; Diogo C Cabral-de-Mello
Journal:  BMC Evol Biol       Date:  2013-08-09       Impact factor: 3.260

9.  RNA sequencing reveals sexually dimorphic gene expression before gonadal differentiation in chicken and allows comprehensive annotation of the W-chromosome.

Authors:  Katie L Ayers; Nadia M Davidson; Diana Demiyah; Kelly N Roeszler; Frank Grützner; Andrew H Sinclair; Alicia Oshlack; Craig A Smith
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10.  Role of recombination and faithfulness to partner in sex chromosome degeneration.

Authors:  Dorota Mackiewicz; Piotr Posacki; Michał Burdukiewicz; Paweł Błażej
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  10 in total

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