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An investigation of Y chromosome incorporations in 400 species of Drosophila and related genera

Y chromosomes are widely believed to evolve from a normal autosome through a process of massive gene loss (with preservation of some male genes), shaped by sex-antagonistic selection and complemented by occasional gains of male-related genes. The net result of these processes is a male-specialized c...

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Autores principales: Dupim, Eduardo G., Goldstein, Gabriel, Vanderlinde, Thyago, Vaz, Suzana C., Krsticevic, Flávia, Bastos, Aline, Pinhão, Thadeo, Torres, Marcos, David, Jean R., Vilela, Carlos R., Carvalho, Antonio Bernardo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6235401/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30388103
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1007770
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author Dupim, Eduardo G.
Goldstein, Gabriel
Vanderlinde, Thyago
Vaz, Suzana C.
Krsticevic, Flávia
Bastos, Aline
Pinhão, Thadeo
Torres, Marcos
David, Jean R.
Vilela, Carlos R.
Carvalho, Antonio Bernardo
author_facet Dupim, Eduardo G.
Goldstein, Gabriel
Vanderlinde, Thyago
Vaz, Suzana C.
Krsticevic, Flávia
Bastos, Aline
Pinhão, Thadeo
Torres, Marcos
David, Jean R.
Vilela, Carlos R.
Carvalho, Antonio Bernardo
author_sort Dupim, Eduardo G.
collection PubMed
description Y chromosomes are widely believed to evolve from a normal autosome through a process of massive gene loss (with preservation of some male genes), shaped by sex-antagonistic selection and complemented by occasional gains of male-related genes. The net result of these processes is a male-specialized chromosome. This might be expected to be an irreversible process, but it was found in 2005 that the Drosophila pseudoobscura Y chromosome was incorporated into an autosome. Y chromosome incorporations have important consequences: a formerly male-restricted chromosome reverts to autosomal inheritance, and the species may shift from an XY/XX to X0/XX sex-chromosome system. In order to assess the frequency and causes of this phenomenon we searched for Y chromosome incorporations in 400 species from Drosophila and related genera. We found one additional large scale event of Y chromosome incorporation, affecting the whole montium subgroup (40 species in our sample); overall 13% of the sampled species (52/400) have Y incorporations. While previous data indicated that after the Y incorporation the ancestral Y disappeared as a free chromosome, the much larger data set analyzed here indicates that a copy of the Y survived as a free chromosome both in montium and pseudoobscura species, and that the current Y of the pseudoobscura lineage results from a fusion between this free Y and the neoY. The 400 species sample also showed that the previously suggested causal connection between X-autosome fusions and Y incorporations is, at best, weak: the new case of Y incorporation (montium) does not have X-autosome fusion, whereas nine independent cases of X-autosome fusions were not followed by Y incorporations. Y incorporation is an underappreciated mechanism affecting Y chromosome evolution; our results show that at least in Drosophila it plays a relevant role and highlight the need of similar studies in other groups.
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spelling pubmed-62354012018-12-06 An investigation of Y chromosome incorporations in 400 species of Drosophila and related genera Dupim, Eduardo G. Goldstein, Gabriel Vanderlinde, Thyago Vaz, Suzana C. Krsticevic, Flávia Bastos, Aline Pinhão, Thadeo Torres, Marcos David, Jean R. Vilela, Carlos R. Carvalho, Antonio Bernardo PLoS Genet Research Article Y chromosomes are widely believed to evolve from a normal autosome through a process of massive gene loss (with preservation of some male genes), shaped by sex-antagonistic selection and complemented by occasional gains of male-related genes. The net result of these processes is a male-specialized chromosome. This might be expected to be an irreversible process, but it was found in 2005 that the Drosophila pseudoobscura Y chromosome was incorporated into an autosome. Y chromosome incorporations have important consequences: a formerly male-restricted chromosome reverts to autosomal inheritance, and the species may shift from an XY/XX to X0/XX sex-chromosome system. In order to assess the frequency and causes of this phenomenon we searched for Y chromosome incorporations in 400 species from Drosophila and related genera. We found one additional large scale event of Y chromosome incorporation, affecting the whole montium subgroup (40 species in our sample); overall 13% of the sampled species (52/400) have Y incorporations. While previous data indicated that after the Y incorporation the ancestral Y disappeared as a free chromosome, the much larger data set analyzed here indicates that a copy of the Y survived as a free chromosome both in montium and pseudoobscura species, and that the current Y of the pseudoobscura lineage results from a fusion between this free Y and the neoY. The 400 species sample also showed that the previously suggested causal connection between X-autosome fusions and Y incorporations is, at best, weak: the new case of Y incorporation (montium) does not have X-autosome fusion, whereas nine independent cases of X-autosome fusions were not followed by Y incorporations. Y incorporation is an underappreciated mechanism affecting Y chromosome evolution; our results show that at least in Drosophila it plays a relevant role and highlight the need of similar studies in other groups. Public Library of Science 2018-11-02 /pmc/articles/PMC6235401/ /pubmed/30388103 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1007770 Text en © 2018 Dupim et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Dupim, Eduardo G.
Goldstein, Gabriel
Vanderlinde, Thyago
Vaz, Suzana C.
Krsticevic, Flávia
Bastos, Aline
Pinhão, Thadeo
Torres, Marcos
David, Jean R.
Vilela, Carlos R.
Carvalho, Antonio Bernardo
An investigation of Y chromosome incorporations in 400 species of Drosophila and related genera
title An investigation of Y chromosome incorporations in 400 species of Drosophila and related genera
title_full An investigation of Y chromosome incorporations in 400 species of Drosophila and related genera
title_fullStr An investigation of Y chromosome incorporations in 400 species of Drosophila and related genera
title_full_unstemmed An investigation of Y chromosome incorporations in 400 species of Drosophila and related genera
title_short An investigation of Y chromosome incorporations in 400 species of Drosophila and related genera
title_sort investigation of y chromosome incorporations in 400 species of drosophila and related genera
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6235401/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30388103
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1007770
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