| Literature DB >> 36208359 |
Jana Štundlová1,2, Monika Hospodářská1,2, Karolína Lukšíková1,3, Anna Voleníková1,2, Tomáš Pavlica1,4, Marie Altmanová1,5, Annekatrin Richter6, Martin Reichard7,8,9, Martina Dalíková2,10, Šárka Pelikánová1, Anatolie Marta1,11, Sergey A Simanovsky12, Matyáš Hiřman1,4, Marek Jankásek1,4, Tomáš Dvořák1,4, Joerg Bohlen1, Petr Ráb1, Christoph Englert6,13, Petr Nguyen14,15, Alexandr Sember16.
Abstract
Homomorphic sex chromosomes and their turnover are common in teleosts. We investigated the evolution of nascent sex chromosomes in several populations of two sister species of African annual killifishes, Nothobranchius furzeri and N. kadleci, focusing on their under-studied repetitive landscape. We combined bioinformatic analyses of the repeatome with molecular cytogenetic techniques, including comparative genomic hybridization, fluorescence in situ hybridization with satellite sequences, ribosomal RNA genes (rDNA) and bacterial artificial chromosomes (BACs), and immunostaining of SYCP3 and MLH1 proteins to mark lateral elements of synaptonemal complexes and recombination sites, respectively. Both species share the same heteromorphic XY sex chromosome system, which thus evolved prior to their divergence. This was corroborated by sequence analysis of a putative master sex determining (MSD) gene gdf6Y in both species. Based on their divergence, differentiation of the XY sex chromosome pair started approximately 2 million years ago. In all populations, the gdf6Y gene mapped within a region rich in satellite DNA on the Y chromosome long arms. Despite their heteromorphism, X and Y chromosomes mostly pair regularly in meiosis, implying synaptic adjustment. In N. kadleci, Y-linked paracentric inversions like those previously reported in N. furzeri were detected. An inversion involving the MSD gene may suppress occasional recombination in the region, which we otherwise evidenced in the N. furzeri population MZCS-121 of the Limpopo clade lacking this inversion. Y chromosome centromeric repeats were reduced compared with the X chromosome and autosomes, which points to a role of relaxed meiotic drive in shaping the Y chromosome repeat landscape. We speculate that the recombination rate between sex chromosomes was reduced due to heterochiasmy. The observed differences between the repeat accumulations on the X and Y chromosomes probably result from high repeat turnover and may not relate closely to the divergence inferred from earlier SNP analyses.Entities:
Keywords: Inversion; Recombination suppression; RepeatExplorer; Repeatome; Sex chromosome degeneration; Sex chromosome polymorphism
Year: 2022 PMID: 36208359 DOI: 10.1007/s10577-022-09707-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chromosome Res ISSN: 0967-3849 Impact factor: 4.620