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Deficit of Mitonuclear Genes on the Human X Chromosome Predates Sex Chromosome Formation
Author(s) -
Rebecca Dean,
Fabian Zimmer,
Judith E. Mank
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
genome biology and evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.702
H-Index - 74
ISSN - 1759-6653
DOI - 10.1093/gbe/evv017
Subject(s) - biology , gene , genetics , x chromosome , chromosome , synteny , y chromosome , genome , chromosome 21 , evolutionary biology
Two taxa studied to date, the therian mammals and Caenorhabditis elegans, display underrepresentations of mitonuclear genes (mt-N genes, nuclear genes whose products are imported to and act within the mitochondria) on their X chromosomes. This pattern has been interpreted as the result of sexual conflict driving mt-N genes off of the X chromosome. However, studies in several other species have failed to detect a convergent biased distribution of sex-linked mt-N genes, leading to questions over the generality of the role of sexual conflict in shaping the distribution of mt-N genes. Here we tested whether mt-N genes moved off of the therian X chromosome following sex chromosome formation, consistent with the role of sexual conflict, or whether the paucity of mt-N genes on the therian X is a chance result of an underrepresentation on the ancestral regions that formed the X chromosome. We used a synteny-based approach to identify the ancestral regions in the platypus and chicken genomes that later formed the therian X chromosome. We then quantified the movement of mt-N genes on and off of the X chromosome and the distribution of mt-N genes on the human X and ancestral X regions. We failed to find an excess of mt-N gene movement off of the X. The bias of mt-N genes on ancestral therian X chromosomes was also not significantly different from the biases on the human X. Together our results suggest that, rather than conflict driving mt-N genes off of the mammalian X, random biases on chromosomes that formed the X chromosome could explain the paucity of mt-N genes in the therian lineage.

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