Chromosomal gene movements reflect the recent origin and biology of therian sex chromosomes

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Version: Final published version
Serval ID
serval:BIB_2E549EDE2EE7
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Chromosomal gene movements reflect the recent origin and biology of therian sex chromosomes
Journal
PLoS Biology
Author(s)
Potrzebowski L., Vinckenbosch N., Marques A. C., Chalmel F., Jegou B., Kaessmann H.
ISSN
1545-7885
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2008
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
6
Number
4
Pages
e80
Language
english
Abstract
Mammalian sex chromosomes stem from ancestral autosomes and have substantially differentiated. It was shown that X-linked genes have generated duplicate intronless gene copies (retrogenes) on autosomes due to this differentiation. However, the precise driving forces for this out-of-X gene "movement" and its evolutionary onset are not known. Based on expression analyses of male germ-cell populations, we here substantiate and extend the hypothesis that autosomal retrogenes functionally compensate for the silencing of their X-linked housekeeping parental genes during, but also after, male meiotic sex chromosome inactivation (MSCI). Thus, sexually antagonistic forces have not played a major role for the selective fixation of X-derived gene copies in mammals. Our dating analyses reveal that although retrogenes were produced ever since the common mammalian ancestor, selectively driven retrogene export from the X only started later, on the placental mammal (eutherian) and marsupial (metatherian) lineages, respectively. Together, these observations suggest that chromosome-wide MSCI emerged close to the eutherian-marsupial split approximately 180 million years ago. Given that MSCI probably reflects the spread of the recombination barrier between the X and Y, crucial for their differentiation, our data imply that these chromosomes became more widely differentiated only late in the therian ancestor, well after the divergence of the monotreme lineage. Thus, our study also provides strong independent support for the recent notion that our sex chromosomes emerged, not in the common ancestor of all mammals, but rather in the therian ancestor, and therefore are much younger than previously thought
Keywords
Animals , Evolution,Molecular , France , Gene Expression Profiling , Gene Silencing , genetics , Genome , Genomics , Humans , Male , Mammals , Meiosis , Sex Chromosomes , Switzerland , Transcription,Genetic , X Chromosome Inactivation
Pubmed
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
29/01/2009 23:13
Last modification date
20/08/2019 14:12
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