A rapid rate of sex-chromosome turnover and non-random transitions in true frogs

The canonical model of sex-chromosome evolution predicts that, as recombination is suppressed along sex chromosomes, gametologs will progressively differentiate, eventually becoming heteromorphic. However, there are numerous examples of homomorphic sex chromosomes across the tree of life. This homom...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2018-10, Vol.9 (1), p.4088-11, Article 4088
Hauptverfasser: Jeffries, Daniel L., Lavanchy, Guillaume, Sermier, Roberto, Sredl, Michael J., Miura, Ikuo, Borzée, Amaël, Barrow, Lisa N., Canestrelli, Daniele, Crochet, Pierre-André, Dufresnes, Christophe, Fu, Jinzhong, Ma, Wen-Juan, Garcia, Constantino Macías, Ghali, Karim, Nicieza, Alfredo G., O’Donnell, Ryan P., Rodrigues, Nicolas, Romano, Antonio, Martínez-Solano, Íñigo, Stepanyan, Ilona, Zumbach, Silvia, Brelsford, Alan, Perrin, Nicolas
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The canonical model of sex-chromosome evolution predicts that, as recombination is suppressed along sex chromosomes, gametologs will progressively differentiate, eventually becoming heteromorphic. However, there are numerous examples of homomorphic sex chromosomes across the tree of life. This homomorphy has been suggested to result from frequent sex-chromosome turnovers, yet we know little about which forces drive them. Here, we describe an extremely fast rate of turnover among 28 species of Ranidae. Transitions are not random, but converge on several chromosomes, potentially due to genes they harbour. Transitions also preserve the ancestral pattern of male heterogamety, in line with the ‘hot-potato’ model of sex-chromosome transitions, suggesting a key role for mutation-load accumulation in non-recombining genomic regions. The importance of mutation-load selection in frogs might result from the extreme heterochiasmy they exhibit, making frog sex chromosomes differentiate immediately from emergence and across their entire length. The evolutionary forces that favour transitions in sex chromosomes are not well understood. Here, Jeffries and colleagues show a very high rate of sex chromosome turnover in true frogs, which may be driven by rapid mutation-load accumulation due to the low recombination rate in males.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-018-06517-2