Demasculinization of the Anopheles gambiae X chromosome
File(s)
Author(s)
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
Background
In a number of organisms sex-biased genes are non-randomly distributed between autosomes and the shared sex chromosome X (or Z). Studies on Anopheles gambiae have produced conflicting results regarding the underrepresentation of male-biased genes on the X chromosome and it is unclear to what extent sexual antagonism, dosage compensation or X-inactivation in the male germline, the evolutionary forces that have been suggested to affect the chromosomal distribution of sex-biased genes, are operational in Anopheles.
Results
We performed a meta-analysis of sex-biased gene expression in Anopheles gambiae which provides evidence for a general underrepresentation of male-biased genes on the X-chromosome that increased in significance with the observed degree of sex-bias. A phylogenomic comparison between Drosophila melanogaster, Aedes aegypti and Culex quinquefasciatus also indicates that the Anopheles X chromosome strongly disfavours the evolutionary conservation of male-biased expression and that novel male-biased genes are more likely to arise on autosomes. Finally, we demonstrate experimentally that transgenes situated on the Anopheles gambiae X chromosome are transcriptionally silenced in the male germline.
Conclusion
The data presented here support the hypothesis that the observed demasculinization of the Anopheles X chromosome is driven by X-chromosome inactivation in the male germline and by sexual antagonism. The demasculinization appears to be the consequence of a loss of male-biased expression, rather than a failure in the establishment or the extinction of male-biased genes.
In a number of organisms sex-biased genes are non-randomly distributed between autosomes and the shared sex chromosome X (or Z). Studies on Anopheles gambiae have produced conflicting results regarding the underrepresentation of male-biased genes on the X chromosome and it is unclear to what extent sexual antagonism, dosage compensation or X-inactivation in the male germline, the evolutionary forces that have been suggested to affect the chromosomal distribution of sex-biased genes, are operational in Anopheles.
Results
We performed a meta-analysis of sex-biased gene expression in Anopheles gambiae which provides evidence for a general underrepresentation of male-biased genes on the X-chromosome that increased in significance with the observed degree of sex-bias. A phylogenomic comparison between Drosophila melanogaster, Aedes aegypti and Culex quinquefasciatus also indicates that the Anopheles X chromosome strongly disfavours the evolutionary conservation of male-biased expression and that novel male-biased genes are more likely to arise on autosomes. Finally, we demonstrate experimentally that transgenes situated on the Anopheles gambiae X chromosome are transcriptionally silenced in the male germline.
Conclusion
The data presented here support the hypothesis that the observed demasculinization of the Anopheles X chromosome is driven by X-chromosome inactivation in the male germline and by sexual antagonism. The demasculinization appears to be the consequence of a loss of male-biased expression, rather than a failure in the establishment or the extinction of male-biased genes.
Date Issued
2012-05-18
Date Acceptance
2012-05-18
Citation
BMC Evolutionary Biology, 2012, 12
ISSN
1471-2148
Publisher
BioMed Central
Journal / Book Title
BMC Evolutionary Biology
Volume
12
Copyright Statement
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
License URL
Subjects
Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Evolutionary Biology
Genetics & Heredity
EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
GENETICS & HEREDITY
Anopheles gambiae
demasculinization
germline x-chromosome inactivation
sexual antagonism
dosage compensation
BIASED GENE-EXPRESSION
LINKED GENES
DROSOPHILA-MELANOGASTER
CAENORHABDITIS-ELEGANS
C-ELEGANS
SEX
GERMLINE
INACTIVATION
EVOLUTION
VECTOR
Animals
Culex
Drosophila melanogaster
Evolution, Molecular
Female
Gene Expression Profiling
Gene Silencing
Genes, Insect
Genomics
Germ Cells
Male
Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis
Phylogeny
Transgenes
X Chromosome
X Chromosome Inactivation
0603 Evolutionary Biology
0604 Genetics
Publication Status
Published
Article Number
69