A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Gene-rich UV sex chromosomes harbor conserved regulators of sexual development




AuthorsCarey Sarah B, Jenkins Jerry, Lovell JohnT, Maumus Florian, Sreedasyam Avinash, Payton Adam C, Shu Shengqiang, Tiley George P, Fernandez-Pozo Noe, Healey Adam, Barry Kerrie, Chen Cindy, Wang Mei, Lipzen Anna, Daum Chris, Saski Christopher A, McBreen Jordan C, Conrad Roth E, Kollar Leslie M, Olsson Sanna, Huttunen Sanna, Landis Jacob B, Burleigh J Gordoon, Wickett Norman J, Johnson Matthew G, Rensing Stefana A, Grimwood Jane, Schmutz Jeremy, McDaniel Stuart F

PublisherAMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE

Publication year2021

JournalScience Advances

Journal name in sourceSCIENCE ADVANCES

Journal acronymSCI ADV

Article numberARTN eabh2488

Volume7

Issue27

Number of pages12

ISSN2375-2548

eISSN2375-2548

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.abh2488

Web address https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.abh2488

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/66661309


Abstract

Nonrecombining sex chromosomes, like the mammalian Y, often lose genes and accumulate transposable elements, a process termed degeneration. The correlation between suppressed recombination and degeneration is clear in animal XY systems, but the absence of recombination is confounded with other asymmetries between the X and Y. In contrast, UV sex chromosomes, like those found in bryophytes, experience symmetrical population genetic conditions. Here, we generate nearly gapless female and male chromosome-scale reference genomes of the moss Ceratodon purpureus to test for degeneration in the bryophyte UV sex chromosomes. We show that the moss sex chromosomes evolved over 300 million years ago and expanded via two chromosomal fusions. Although the sex chromosomes exhibit weaker purifying selection than autosomes, we find that suppressed recombination alone is insufficient to drive degeneration. Instead, the U and V sex chromosomes harbor thousands of broadly expressed genes, including numerous key regulators of sexual development across land plants.


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