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The multiple sex chromosomes of platypus and echidna are not completely identical and several share homology with the avian Z

Authors :
Frédéric Veyrunes
Jennifer A. Marshall Graves
Frank Grützner
Patricia C. M. O’Brien
Steve Johnston
Malcolm A. Ferguson-Smith
Enkhjargal Tsend-Ayush
Willem Rens
Helen E. Skelton
Oliver Clarke
Mary Wallis
Vladimir A. Trifonov
Daria Graphodatskaya
Ferguson-Smith, Malcolm [0000-0001-9372-1381]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Source :
Genome Biology
Publisher :
Springer Nature

Abstract

A comparative study of the karyotype of the short-beaked echidna shows that monotremes appear to have a unique XY sex chromosome system that shares some homology with the avian Z.<br />Background Sex-determining systems have evolved independently in vertebrates. Placental mammals and marsupials have an XY system, birds have a ZW system. Reptiles and amphibians have different systems, including temperature-dependent sex determination, and XY and ZW systems that differ in origin from birds and placental mammals. Monotremes diverged early in mammalian evolution, just after the mammalian clade diverged from the sauropsid clade. Our previous studies showed that male platypus has five X and five Y chromosomes, no SRY, and DMRT1 on an X chromosome. In order to investigate monotreme sex chromosome evolution, we performed a comparative study of platypus and echidna by chromosome painting and comparative gene mapping. Results Chromosome painting reveals a meiotic chain of nine sex chromosomes in the male echidna and establishes their order in the chain. Two of those differ from those in the platypus, three of the platypus sex chromosomes differ from those of the echidna and the order of several chromosomes is rearranged. Comparative gene mapping shows that, in addition to bird autosome regions, regions of bird Z chromosomes are homologous to regions in four platypus X chromosomes, that is, X1, X2, X3, X5, and in chromosome Y1. Conclusion Monotreme sex chromosomes are easiest to explain on the hypothesis that autosomes were added sequentially to the translocation chain, with the final additions after platypus and echidna divergence. Genome sequencing and contig anchoring show no homology yet between platypus and therian Xs; thus, monotremes have a unique XY sex chromosome system that shares some homology with the avian Z.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14656906
Volume :
8
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genome Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3e81e4a743ceab318a640de9498c73f9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/gb-2007-8-11-r243