Gap-free X and Y chromosome assemblies of Salix arbutifolia reveal an evolutionary change from male to female heterogamety in willows, without a change in the position of the sex-determining locus

被引:5
作者
Wang, Yi [1 ,2 ]
Gong, Guang-Nan [1 ]
Wang, Yuan [1 ]
Zhang, Ren-Gang [3 ]
Hoerandl, Elvira [4 ]
Zhang, Zhi-Xiang [2 ]
Charlesworth, Deborah [5 ]
He, Li [1 ]
机构
[1] Eastern China Conservat Ctr Wild Endangered Plant, Shanghai Chenshan Bot Garden, Shanghai 201602, Peoples R China
[2] Beijing Forestry Univ, Sch Ecol & Nat Conservat, Lab Systemat Evolut & Biogeog Woody Plants, Beijing 100091, Peoples R China
[3] Chinese Acad Sci, Kunming Inst Bot, Yunnan Key Lab Integrat Conservat Plant Species Ex, Kunming 650201, Yunnan, Peoples R China
[4] Univ Goettingen, Dept Systemat Biodivers & Evolut Plants Herbarium, D-37073 Gottingen, Germany
[5] Univ Edinburgh, Inst Evolutionary Biol, Sch Biol Sci, Edinburgh EH9 3FL, Scotland
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
evolutionary strata; heteromorphism; inversion; pericentromeric regions; Salix arbutifolia; sex chromosome turnovers; FUNCTIONAL ANNOTATION; CHICKEN Z; GENOME; ALIGNMENT; DIOECY; MODEL; TRANSCRIPTOME; DYNAMICS; SYSTEMS; STRATA;
D O I
10.1111/nph.19744
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
In the Vetrix clade of Salix, a genus of woody flowering plants, sex determination involves chromosome 15, but an XY system has changed to a ZW system. We studied the detailed genetic changes involved. We used genome sequencing, with chromosome conformation capture (Hi-C) and PacBio HiFi reads to assemble chromosome level gap-free X and Y of Salix arbutifolia, and distinguished the haplotypes in the 15X- and 15Y-linked regions, to study the evolutionary history of the sex-linked regions (SLRs). Our sequencing revealed heteromorphism of the X and Y haplotypes of the SLR, with the X-linked region being considerably larger than the corresponding Y region, mainly due to accumulated repetitive sequences and gene duplications. The phylogenies of single-copy orthogroups within the SLRs indicate that S. arbutifolia and Salix purpurea share an ancestral SLR within a repeat-rich region near the chromosome 15 centromere. During the change in heterogamety, the X-linked region changed to a W-linked one, while the Z was derived from the Y.
引用
收藏
页码:2872 / 2887
页数:16
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