Origins and functional evolution of Y chromosomes across mammals
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v508/n7497/full/nature13151.html
Abstract
Y chromosomes underlie sex determination in mammals, but
their repeat-rich nature has hampered sequencing and associated
evolutionary studies. Here we trace Y evolution across 15 representative
mammals on the basis of high-throughput genome and transcriptome
sequencing. We uncover three independent sex chromosome originations in
mammals and birds (the outgroup). The original placental and marsupial
(therian) Y, containing the sex-determining gene
SRY, emerged in the therian ancestor approximately 180
million years ago, in parallel with the first of five monotreme Y chromosomes, carrying the probable sex-determining gene
AMH. The avian W chromosome arose approximately 140
million
years ago in the bird ancestor. The small Y/W gene repertoires,
enriched in regulatory functions, were rapidly defined following
stratification (recombination arrest) and erosion events and have
remained considerably stable. Despite expression decreases in therians,
Y/W genes show notable conservation of proto-sex chromosome expression
patterns, although various Y genes evolved testis-specificities through
differential regulatory decay. Thus, although some genes evolved novel
functions through spatial/temporal expression shifts, most Y genes
probably endured, at least initially, because of dosage constraints.
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