2021
DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2020.0089
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A 180 Myr-old female-specific genome region in sturgeon reveals the oldest known vertebrate sex determining system with undifferentiated sex chromosomes

Abstract: Several hypotheses explain the prevalence of undifferentiated sex chromosomes in poikilothermic vertebrates. Turnovers change the master sex determination gene, the sex chromosome or the sex determination system (e.g. XY to WZ). Jumping master genes stay main triggers but translocate to other chromosomes. Occasional recombination (e.g. in sex-reversed females) prevents sex chromosome degeneration. Recent research has uncovered conserved heteromorphic or even homomorphic sex chromosomes in several clades of non… Show more

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Cited by 47 publications
(42 citation statements)
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References 71 publications
(93 reference statements)
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“…Likewise, sex chromosomes seem to differentiate at a faster rate under female than male heterogamety in teleost fishes [ 145 ]. Ancient, but still quite poorly differentiated XX/XY sex chromosomes were also demonstrated in skinks [ 91 , 161 ] and ZZ/ZW in sturgeons [ 90 ]. Thus, counter to theoretical predictions, sex chromosomes do not seem to differentiate faster and/or are subjected to more turnovers under male than female heterogamety.…”
Section: Is There Variation In Sex Chromosome Differentiation Between Male (Xx/xy) and Female (Zz/zw) Heterogamety?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Likewise, sex chromosomes seem to differentiate at a faster rate under female than male heterogamety in teleost fishes [ 145 ]. Ancient, but still quite poorly differentiated XX/XY sex chromosomes were also demonstrated in skinks [ 91 , 161 ] and ZZ/ZW in sturgeons [ 90 ]. Thus, counter to theoretical predictions, sex chromosomes do not seem to differentiate faster and/or are subjected to more turnovers under male than female heterogamety.…”
Section: Is There Variation In Sex Chromosome Differentiation Between Male (Xx/xy) and Female (Zz/zw) Heterogamety?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…old, poorly differentiated sex chromosomes with little degeneration for a long evolutionary time [12,13].…”
Section: Why Should the Emergence Of Sex Chromosomes Be Non-random?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Using chromosome-scale assemblies and pool-sequencing, an approximately 16 kb female-specific sequence from sterlet ( Acipenser ruthenus ) was detected by Kuhl et al . [ 84 ]. A polymerase chain reaction-genotyping test, yielding female-specific products in six sturgeon species, spanning the entire phylogeny with the most divergent extant lineages ( Acipenser sturio, Acipenser oxyrinchus versus Acipenser ruthenus, Huso huso ), stemming from an ancient tetraploidization.…”
Section: Overview Of Current Knowledge About Sex Evolution Across the Vertebrate Phylogenymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similar results were obtained in two octoploid species ( Acipenser gueldenstaedtii, Acipenser baerii ). Phylogenetic conservation during 180 Myr of sturgeon evolution and across at least one polyploidization event revealed the oldest known vertebrate system with undifferentiated sex chromosomes, based presumably on a ZZ/ZW-mode of sex determination [ 84 ].…”
Section: Overview Of Current Knowledge About Sex Evolution Across the Vertebrate Phylogenymentioning
confidence: 99%