Sequence analysis in Bos taurus reveals pervasiveness of X–Y arms races in mammalian lineages
Author(s)
Hughes, Jennifer F.; Skaletsky, Helen; Koutseva, Natalia; Raudsepp, Terje; Brown, Laura G.; Bellott, Daniel W.; Cho, Ting-Jan; Dugan-Rocha, Shannon; Khan, Ziad; Kremitzki, Colin; Fronick, Catrina; Graves-Lindsay, Tina A.; Fulton, Lucinda; Warren, Wesley C.; Wilson, Richard K.; Owens, Elaine; Womack, James E.; Murphy, William J.; Muzny, Donna M.; Worley, Kim C.; Chowdhary, Bhanu P.; Gibbs, Richard A.; Page, David C; ... Show more Show less
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© 2020 Hughes et al. Studies of Y Chromosome evolution have focused primarily on gene decay, a consequence of suppression of crossing-over with the X Chromosome. Here, we provide evidence that suppression of X–Y crossing-over unleashed a second dynamic: selfish X–Y arms races that reshaped the sex chromosomes in mammals as different as cattle, mice, and men. Using super-resolution sequencing, we explore the Y Chromosome of Bos taurus (bull) and find it to be dominated by massive, lineage-specific amplification of testis-expressed gene families, making it the most gene-dense Y Chromosome sequenced to date. As in mice, an X-linked homolog of a bull Y-amplified gene has become testis-specific and amplified. This evolutionary convergence implies that lineage-specific X–Y coevolution through gene amplification, and the selfish forces underlying this phenomenon, were dominatingly powerful among diverse mammalian lineages. Together with Y gene decay, X–Y arms races molded mammalian sex chromosomes and influenced the course of mammalian evolution.
Date issued
2020Department
Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research; Howard Hughes Medical Institute; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of BiologyJournal
Genome Research
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory