Fruchard, Cécile ; Badouin, Hélène ; Latrasse, David ; Devani, Ravi S. ; Muyle, Aline ; Rhoné, Bénédicte ; Renner, Susanne S. ; Banerjee, Anjan K. ; Bendahmane, Abdelhafid ; Marais, Gabriel A. B. (2020) Evidence for Dosage Compensation in Coccinia grandis, a Plant with a Highly Heteromorphic XY System Genes, 11 (7). p. 787. ISSN 2073-4425
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Official URL: http://doi.org/10.3390/genes11070787
Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes11070787
Abstract
About 15,000 angiosperms are dioecious, but the mechanisms of sex determination in plants remain poorly understood. In particular, how Y chromosomes evolve and degenerate, and whether dosage compensation evolves as a response, are matters of debate. Here, we focus on Coccinia grandis, a dioecious cucurbit with the highest level of X/Y heteromorphy recorded so far. We identified sex-linked genes using RNA sequences from a cross and a model-based method termed SEX-DETector. Parents and F1 individuals were genotyped, and the transmission patterns of SNPs were then analyzed. In the >1300 sex-linked genes studied, maximum X-Y divergence was 0.13–0.17, and substantial Y degeneration is implied by an average Y/X expression ratio of 0.63 and an inferred gene loss on the Y of ~40%. We also found reduced Y gene expression being compensated by elevated expression of corresponding genes on the X and an excess of sex-biased genes on the sex chromosomes. Molecular evolution of sex-linked genes in C. grandis is thus comparable to that in Silene latifolia, another dioecious plant with a strongly heteromorphic XY system, and cucurbits are the fourth plant family in which dosage compensation is described, suggesting it might be common in plants.
Item Type: | Article |
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Source: | Copyright of this article belongs to MDPI. |
Keywords: | Dioecy; Sex Chromosomes; Y Degeneration; Sex-Biased Genes; Cucurbits. |
ID Code: | 115440 |
Deposited On: | 17 Mar 2021 09:04 |
Last Modified: | 17 Mar 2021 09:04 |
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