| Literature DB >> 28630332 |
Sara Branco1, Hélène Badouin1,2, Ricardo C Rodríguez de la Vega1, Jérôme Gouzy2, Fantin Carpentier1, Gabriela Aguileta1, Sophie Siguenza2, Jean-Tristan Brandenburg1, Marco A Coelho3, Michael E Hood4, Tatiana Giraud5.
Abstract
Sex chromosomes can display successive steps of recombination suppression known as "evolutionary strata," which are thought to result from the successive linkage of sexually antagonistic genes to sex-determining genes. However, there is little evidence to support this explanation. Here we investigate whether evolutionary strata can evolve without sexual antagonism using fungi that display suppressed recombination extending beyond loci determining mating compatibility despite lack of male/female roles associated with their mating types. By comparing full-length chromosome assemblies from five anther-smut fungi with or without recombination suppression in their mating-type chromosomes, we inferred the ancestral gene order and derived chromosomal arrangements in this group. This approach shed light on the chromosomal fusion underlying the linkage of mating-type loci in fungi and provided evidence for multiple clearly resolved evolutionary strata over a range of ages (0.9-2.1 million years) in mating-type chromosomes. Several evolutionary strata did not include genes involved in mating-type determination. The existence of strata devoid of mating-type genes, despite the lack of sexual antagonism, calls for a unified theory of sex-related chromosome evolution, incorporating, for example, the influence of partially linked deleterious mutations and the maintenance of neutral rearrangement polymorphism due to balancing selection on sexes and mating types.Entities:
Keywords: chromosomal rearrangements; evolutionary strata; fungi; genomic degeneration; mating-type chromosomes
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28630332 PMCID: PMC5502610 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1701658114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205