| Literature DB >> 30104649 |
Aline Muyle1, Niklaus Zemp2,3, Cécile Fruchard4, Radim Cegan5, Jan Vrana6, Clothilde Deschamps7, Raquel Tavares4, Roman Hobza5,6, Franck Picard4, Alex Widmer3, Gabriel A B Marais4.
Abstract
Sex chromosomes have repeatedly evolved from a pair of autosomes. Consequently, X and Y chromosomes initially have similar gene content, but ongoing Y degeneration leads to reduced expression and eventual loss of Y genes1. The resulting imbalance in gene expression between Y genes and the rest of the genome is expected to reduce male fitness, especially when protein networks have components from both autosomes and sex chromosomes. A diverse set of dosage compensating mechanisms that alleviates these negative effects has been described in animals2-4. However, the early steps in the evolution of dosage compensation remain unknown, and dosage compensation is poorly understood in plants5. Here, we describe a dosage compensation mechanism in the evolutionarily young XY sex determination system of the plant Silene latifolia. Genomic imprinting results in higher expression from the maternal X chromosome in both males and females. This compensates for reduced Y expression in males, but results in X overexpression in females and may be detrimental. It could represent a transient early stage in the evolution of dosage compensation. Our finding has striking resemblance to the first stage proposed by Ohno6 for the evolution of X inactivation in mammals.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30104649 DOI: 10.1038/s41477-018-0221-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Plants ISSN: 2055-0278 Impact factor: 15.793