| Literature DB >> 25977773 |
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Abstract
The vast majority of eukaryotic organisms reproduce sexually, yet the nature of the sexual system and the mechanism of sex determination often vary remarkably, even among closely related species. Some species of animals and plants change sex across their lifespan, some contain hermaphrodites as well as males and females, some determine sex with highly differentiated chromosomes, while others determine sex according to their environment. Testing evolutionary hypotheses regarding the causes and consequences of this diversity requires interspecific data placed in a phylogenetic context. Such comparative studies have been hampered by the lack of accessible data listing sexual systems and sex determination mechanisms across the eukaryotic tree of life. Here, we describe a database developed to facilitate access to sexual system and sex chromosome information, with data on sexual systems from 11,038 plant, 705 fish, 173 amphibian, 593 non-avian reptilian, 195 avian, 479 mammalian, and 11,556 invertebrate species.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25977773 PMCID: PMC4322564 DOI: 10.1038/sdata.2014.15
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Data ISSN: 2052-4463 Impact factor: 6.444
Sexual system database ontology in plants.
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| Sexual system | Hermaphrodite, monoecy, dioecy, gynodioecy, androdioecy, gynomonoecy, andromonoecy, polygamodioecy, polygamomonoecy, apomictic, other |
| Genotypic (sex determination) | Male heterogametic, female heterogametic, GSD, polygenic |
| Karyotype | ZO, ZW, XY, XO, WO, homomorphic, complex XY (e.g., X1X2Y), complex ZW (e.g., Z1Z2W) |
| Molecular basis | Dosage, Y dominant, W dominant |
| Selfing | Self incompatible, self compatible |
| Growth form | Herb, shrub, tree, herbaceous vine, liana/woody vine |
| Woodiness | W woody, H herbaceous, variable |
| Woodiness count | #W; #H; #variable |
| Life form | Annual, perennial |
| Chromosome number | (List of records for counts) |
| Chromosome number | (integer number) |
| Chromosome number | (real number) |
aSexual system is the morphological system. In some species, hermaphrodites function primarily as males or primarily as females, but this information is not known for the majority of species in the database.
bSexual system states include: Hermaphrodite, plants whose flowers have both male and female parts. Monoecy, plants have separate male and female flowers on the same plant. Dioecy, all plants are either female or male. Gynodioecy, both female and hermaphrodite plants present. Androdioecy, both male and hermaphrodite plants present. Gynomonoecy, female and hermaphrodite flowers within a plant. Andromonoecy, male and hermaphrodite flowers within a plant. Polygamodioecy, male, female, and hermaphrodite plants present. Polygamomonoecy, male, female, and hermaphrodite flowers within a plant. Apomictic, asexual/parthenogenetic.
cAs reported by Zanne et al.[23,24].
dSeparate columns indicate gametophytic (after meiosis; ‘haploid’ number) and sporophytic chromosome counts (before meiosis; ‘diploid’ number).
Sexual system database ontology in Animals.
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| Sexual system | (as in |
| Genotypic (sex determination) | (as in |
| Karyotype | (as in |
| Molecular basis | (as in |
| Chromosome number (female) | (integer number) |
| Chromosome number (male) | (integer number) |
| Predicted ploidy | 1,2,3,4 |
| Haplodiploidy (sex determination) | Arrhenotoky, paternal genome elimination, other |
| Environmental (sex determination) | TSD, TSD Ia, TSD Ib, TSD II, size, density, pH, ESD_other |
| Polyfactorial (sex determination) | Yes, no |
aIn animals, gonochorous is used in place of dioecy.
bTSD: general term when reaction norm with temperature is not specified. TSD Ia: males produced at low temperatures and females at high temperature. TSD Ib: females produced at low temperatures and males at high temperature. TSD II: females produced at low and high temperatures, males produced at intermediate values.
Figure 1Distribution and sample of plant data from the Tree of Sex Database.
Tree structure is derived from taxonomy, where each tip represents all species in a single genus. Diploid chromosome number is indicated by the height of the innermost ring; all other rings indicate the presence or absence of the trait named at the base of the ring. The ‘Other’ ring includes the states: apomictic, gynomonoecy, andromonoecy, polygamodioecy, and polygamomonoecy. The sexual trait data displayed in the rings is based on 11,038 plant entries.
Figure 2Distribution and sample of invertebrate data from the Tree of Sex Database.
The XY/ZW ring is colored blue for XY and red for ZW taxa. Complex SCS indicates species with complex sex chromosome karyotypes (e.g., X1X2Y). The sexual trait data displayed in the rings is based on 11,556 invertebrate entries. Remaining features as in Figure 1.
Figure 3Distribution and sample of vertebrate data from the Tree of Sex Database.
The ‘Other’ ring includes parthenogenesis, gynogenesis, and hybridogenesis. The XY/ZW ring is colored blue for XY and red for ZW taxa. The sexual trait data displayed in the rings is based on 2,145 vertebrate entries. Remaining features as in Figures 1 and 2.