Unique structure and positive selection promote the rapid divergence of Drosophila Y chromosomes
Y chromosomes across diverse species convergently evolve a gene-poor, heterochromatic organization enriched for duplicated genes, LTR retrotransposons, and satellite DNA. Sexual antagonism and a loss of recombination play major roles in the degeneration of young Y chromosomes. However, the processes...
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Zusammenfassung: | Y chromosomes across diverse species convergently evolve a gene-poor,
heterochromatic organization enriched for duplicated genes, LTR
retrotransposons, and satellite DNA. Sexual antagonism and a loss of
recombination play major roles in the degeneration of young Y chromosomes.
However, the processes shaping the evolution of mature, already
degenerated Y chromosomes are less well-understood. Because Y chromosomes
evolve rapidly, comparisons between closely related species are
particularly useful. We generated de novo long read assemblies
complemented with cytological validation to reveal Y chromosome
organization in three closely related species of the Drosophila simulans
complex, which diverged only 250,000 years ago and share >98%
sequence identity. We find these Y chromosomes are divergent in their
organization and repetitive DNA composition and discover new Y-linked gene
families whose evolution is driven by both positive selection and gene
conversion. These Y chromosomes are also enriched for large deletions,
suggesting that the repair of double-strand breaks on Y chromosomes may be
biased toward microhomology-mediated end joining over canonical
non-homologous end-joining. We propose that this repair mechanism
contributes to the convergent evolution of Y chromosome organization
across organisms. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.280gb5mr6 |