Independent Evolution of Sex Chromosomes and Male Pregnancy–Related Genes in Two Seahorse Species

Author:

Long Xin12,Charlesworth Deborah3ORCID,Qi Jianfei4,Wu Ruiqiong5,Chen Meiling5,Wang Zongji1,Xu Luohao6,Fu Honggao5,Zhang Xueping5,Chen Xinxin4,He Libin4,Zheng Leyun4,Huang Zhen57,Zhou Qi1689ORCID

Affiliation:

1. MOE Laboratory of Biosystems Homeostasis and Protection and Zhejiang Provincial Key Laboratory for Cancer Molecular Cell Biology, Life Sciences Institute, Zhejiang University , Hangzhou 310058 , China

2. Research Center for Intelligent Computing Platforms, Zhejiang Lab , Hangzhou 311100 , China

3. Institute of Evolutionary Biology, School of Biological Sciences, University of Edinburgh , West Mains Road, Edinburgh EH9 3LF , UK

4. Department of Aquaculture, Fisheries Research Institute of Fujian , Xiamen 361013 , China

5. Fujian Key Laboratory of Developmental and Neural Biology & Southern Center for Biomedical Research, College of Life Sciences, Fujian Normal University , Fuzhou, Fujian , China

6. MOE Key Laboratory of Freshwater Fish Reproduction and Development, Key Laboratory of Aquatic Science of Chongqing, School of Life Sciences, Southwest University , Chongqing 400715 , China

7. Fujian-Macao Science and Technology Cooperation Base of Traditional Chinese Medicine-Oriented Chronic Disease Prevention and Treatment, Innovation and Transformation Center, Fujian University of Traditional Chinese Medicine , Fuzhou 350108 , China

8. Center for Reproductive Medicine, The Second Affiliated Hospital, School of Medicine, Zhejiang University , Hangzhou 310052 , China

9. Evolutionary & Organismal Biology Research Center, School of Medicine, Zhejiang University , Hangzhou 310058 , China

Abstract

Abstract Unlike birds and mammals, many teleosts have homomorphic sex chromosomes, and changes in the chromosome carrying the sex-determining locus, termed “turnovers”, are common. Recent turnovers allow studies of several interesting questions. One question is whether the new sex-determining regions evolve to become completely non-recombining, and if so, how and why. Another is whether (as predicted) evolutionary changes that benefit one sex accumulate in the newly sex-linked region. To study these questions, we analyzed the genome sequences of two seahorse species of the Syngnathidae, a fish group in which many species evolved a unique structure, the male brood pouch. We find that both seahorse species have XY sex chromosome systems, but their sex chromosome pairs are not homologs, implying that at least one turnover event has occurred. The Y-linked regions occupy 63.9% and 95.1% of the entire sex chromosome of the two species and do not exhibit extensive sequence divergence with their X-linked homologs. We find evidence for occasional recombination between the extant sex chromosomes that may account for their homomorphism. We argue that these Y-linked regions did not evolve by recombination suppression after the turnover, but by the ancestral nature of the low crossover rates in these chromosome regions. With such an ancestral crossover landscape, a turnover can instantly create an extensive Y-linked region. Finally, we test for adaptive evolution of male pouch–related genes after they became Y-linked in the seahorse.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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