Sex chromosome turnover in hybridizing stickleback lineages

被引:3
|
作者
Yi, Xueling [1 ]
Wang, Dandan [1 ]
Reid, Kerry [1 ]
Feng, Xueyun [2 ,3 ]
Loytynoja, Ari [3 ,4 ]
Merila, Juha [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Hong Kong, Sch Biol Sci, Area Ecol & Biodivers, Kadoorie Biol Sci Bldg, Pok Fu Lam Rd, Hong Kong, Peoples R China
[2] Univ Helsinki, Fac Biol & Environm Sci, Organismal & Evolutionary Biol Res Programme, Ecol Genet Res Unit, FI-00014 Helsinki, Finland
[3] Univ Helsinki, Inst Biotechnol, HiLIFE, Helsinki, Finland
[4] Univ Helsinki, Fac Biol & Environm Sci, Organismal & Evolutionary Biol Res Programme, Helsinki, Finland
基金
芬兰科学院; 中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
admixture; introgression; Pungitius pungitius; sex-determining region; SDR; EVOLUTION; DISCOVERY; FRAMEWORK; SELECTION; FORMAT; RATIO;
D O I
10.1093/evlett/qrae019
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Recent discoveries of sex chromosome diversity across the tree of life have challenged the canonical model of conserved sex chromosome evolution and evoked new theories on labile sex chromosomes that maintain less differentiation and undergo frequent turnover. However, theories of labile sex chromosome evolution lack direct empirical support due to the paucity of case studies demonstrating ongoing sex chromosome turnover in nature. Two divergent lineages (viz. WL & EL) of nine-spined sticklebacks (Pungitius pungitius) with different sex chromosomes (linkage group [LG] 12 in the EL, unknown in the WL) hybridize in a natural secondary contact zone in the Baltic Sea, providing an opportunity to study ongoing turnover between coexisting sex chromosomes. In this study, we first identify an 80 kbp genomic region on LG3 as the sex-determining region (SDR) using whole-genome resequencing data of family crosses of a WL population. We then verify this region as the SDR in most other WL populations and demonstrate a potentially ongoing sex chromosome turnover in admixed marine populations where the evolutionarily younger and homomorphic LG3 sex chromosome replaces the older and heteromorphic LG12 sex chromosome. The results provide a rare glimpse of sex chromosome turnover in the wild and indicate the possible existence of additional yet undiscovered sex chromosome diversity in Pungitius sticklebacks. Sex chromosomes are highly conserved in mammals and birds but much more labile in other species, such as reptiles, amphibians, and fish. In the species having labile sex chromosomes, even different populations of the same species have the potential to evolve different sex chromosomes and sex-determining systems. In the nine-spined stickleback fish (Pungitius pungitius), the eastern European lineage has heteromorphic sex chromosomes on linkage group 12 (LG12), whereas our study identified the western European lineage to have homomorphic sex chromosomes on LG3, where an 80 kbp region determines sex. Interestingly, although the two lineages have different pairs of sex chromosomes, they mate and reproduce in the Baltic Sea. We show that in the hybrid marine populations, the western lineage's homomorphic sex chromosomes (LG3) are taking over the eastern lineage's heteromorphic sex chromosomes (LG12). This suggests that a transition of sex chromosomes (i.e., sex chromosome turnover) is happening in these populations. This study shows that sex chromosomes can be highly diverse in stickleback fish populations, even within the same species. Lastly, we also show a likely different and uncharacterized sex-determining system in UK populations of nine-spined sticklebacks, which indicates high sex chromosome diversity in Pungitius sticklebacks.
引用
收藏
页码:658 / 668
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Turnover of Sex Chromosomes in the Stickleback Fishes (Gasterosteidae)
    Ross, Joseph A.
    Urton, James R.
    Boland, Jessica
    Shapiro, Michael D.
    Peichel, Catherine L.
    PLOS GENETICS, 2009, 5 (02):
  • [2] Sex Chromosome Turnover Contributes to Genomic Divergence between Incipient Stickleback Species
    Yoshida, Kohta
    Makino, Takashi
    Yamaguchi, Katsushi
    Shigenobu, Shuji
    Hasebe, Mitsuyasu
    Kawata, Masakado
    Kume, Manabu
    Mori, Seiichi
    Peichel, Catherine L.
    Toyoda, Atsushi
    Fujiyama, Asao
    Kitano, Jun
    PLOS GENETICS, 2014, 10 (03):
  • [3] A role for a neo-sex chromosome in stickleback speciation
    Kitano, Jun
    Ross, Joseph A.
    Mori, Seiichi
    Kume, Manabu
    Jones, Felicity C.
    Chan, Yingguang F.
    Absher, Devin M.
    Grimwood, Jane
    Schmutz, Jeremy
    Myers, Richard M.
    Kingsley, David M.
    Peichel, Catherine L.
    NATURE, 2009, 461 (7267) : 1079 - 1083
  • [4] High degree of sex chromosome differentiation in stickleback fishes
    Shikano, Takahito
    Natri, Heini M.
    Shimada, Yukinori
    Merila, Juha
    BMC GENOMICS, 2011, 12
  • [5] Fit and fatty freshwater fish: contrasting polyunsaturated fatty acid phenotypes between hybridizing stickleback lineages
    Hudson, Cameron M.
    Ladd, S. Nemiah
    Leal, Miguel C.
    Schubert, Carsten J.
    Seehausen, Ole
    Matthews, Blake
    OIKOS, 2022, 2022 (07)
  • [6] The Origin of a New Sex Chromosome by Introgression between Two Stickleback Fishes
    Dixon, Groves
    Kitano, Jun
    Kirkpatrick, Mark
    MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2019, 36 (01) : 28 - 38
  • [7] High degree of sex chromosome differentiation in stickleback fishes
    Takahito Shikano
    Heini M Natri
    Yukinori Shimada
    Juha Merilä
    BMC Genomics, 12
  • [8] Sex-biased gene expression and recent sex chromosome turnover
    Lichilin, Nicolas
    El Taher, Athimed
    Boehne, Astrid
    PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2021, 376 (1833)
  • [9] Sex chromosome turnover and biodiversity in fishes
    Wang, Jingrong
    Tao, Wenjing
    Kocher, Thomas D.
    Wang, Deshou
    JOURNAL OF GENETICS AND GENOMICS, 2024, 51 (12) : 1351 - 1360
  • [10] Sex-biased gene content is associated with sex chromosome turnover in Danaini butterflies
    Mora, Pablo
    Hospodarska, Monika
    Volenikova, Anna Chung
    Koutecky, Petr
    Stundlova, Jana
    Dalikova, Martina
    Walters, James R.
    Nguyen, Petr
    MOLECULAR ECOLOGY, 2024, 33 (24)