| Literature DB >> 30642250 |
Jian-Rong Yang1,2,3, Xiaoshu Chen4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: During the evolution of mammalian sex chromosomes, the degeneration of Y-linked homologs has led to a dosage imbalance between X-linked and autosomal genes. The evolutionary resolution to such dosage imbalance, as hypothesized by Susumu Ohno fifty years ago, should be doubling the expression of X-linked genes. Recent studies have nevertheless shown that the X to autosome expression ratio equals ~ 1 in haploid human parthenogenetic embryonic stem (pES) cells and ~ 0.5 in diploid pES cells, suggesting no doubled expression for X-linked genes and refuting Ohno's hypothesis.Entities:
Keywords: Dosage compensation; Evolution; Sex chromosome
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30642250 PMCID: PMC6332578 DOI: 10.1186/s12864-019-5432-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Fig. 1No X-chromosome dosage compensation in human single-cell RNA-seq expression profiles. (a) Ratio of the median mRNA expression between X-linked and autosomal genes at cell population level. Error bars show 90% confidence intervals of the medians, estimated by respectively bootstrapping X-linked and autosomal genes 1000 times. (b) Ratio of median mRNA expression between X-linked and autosomal genes was calculated for each single-cell. The median and range (minimum to maximum) of these ratios were indicated by the points (circles or triangles) and the error bars, respectively. In all panels, data from male and female cells are represented by triangles and circles, respectively. Two-tailed Mann–Whitney U test was used to test the equality of the mean expression ratio with 1 (filled symbols, P < 0.05; open symbols, P ≥ 0.05). E3 to E7 indicate embryonic days of the trophectoderm (TE), primitive endoderm (PE) and epiblast (EPI) lineages
Fig. 2Noisy expression suggest that X-linked genes are less dosage sensitive than expected by Ohno’s hypothesis. (a) Ratio of the median CV between X-linked and autosomal genes. (b) Difference between the median DM of X-linked and that of autosomal genes. (c) Difference between the median DM of X-linked and that of housekeeping genes. In all panels, data from male and female cells are represented by triangles and circles, respectively. Error bars show the 90% confidence intervals of the medians, estimated by respectively bootstrapping X-linked and autosomal or housekeeping genes 1000 times. Two-tailed Mann–Whitney U test was used to test the equality of the CV ratio with 1 (a) or the DM difference with 0 (b and c) (filled symbols, P < 0.05; open symbols, P ≥ 0.05). E3 to E7 indicate embryonic days of the trophectoderm (TE), primitive endoderm (PE) and epiblast (EPI) lineages. Twenty genes with similar expression levels as the focal gene were used to compute DM
Chromosomes with lower than average numbers of housekeeping genes are predisposed to become sex chromosomes
| Chromosome | No. of housekeeping genes with one-to-one orthologs | No. of all genes with one-to-one orthologs | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| chicken chr1/4 | other chicken autosomes | chicken chr1/4 | other chicken autosomes | ||
| Complete chromosomes | |||||
| Chicken chr1 | 316 | 2384 | 1615 | 9840 | < 10−4 |
| Chicken chr4 | 160 | 2540 | 835 | 10,620 | 0.002 |
| Syntenic regions | |||||
| Chicken chr1 | 205 | 2495 | 1065 | 10,390 | 0.0006 |
| Chicken chr4 | 149 | 2551 | 802 | 10,653 | 0.0006 |