2018
DOI: 10.1101/414276
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Germline-Restricted Chromosome (GRC) is Widespread among Songbirds

Abstract: The genome of flying birds, the smallest among amniotes, reflects overweight of the extensive DNA loss over the unrestricted proliferation of selfish genetic elements, resulted in a shortage of repeated sequences and lack of B-chromosomes. The only exception of this rule has been described in zebra finch, which possesses a large germ-line restricted chromosome (GRC), transmitted via oocytes, eliminated from male postmeiotic cells and absent in somatic cell. It is considered as a rarity and its origin, content … Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…The presence of at least 7 genes in these three strata implies that the GRC is tens of millions of years old and likely present across songbirds (Extended Data Fig. 7), consistent with a recent cytogenetics preprint 20 . Notably, stratum 4 is specific to the zebra finch species and stratum 5 to the Australian zebra finch subspecies (Fig.…”
Section: Textsupporting
confidence: 68%
“…The presence of at least 7 genes in these three strata implies that the GRC is tens of millions of years old and likely present across songbirds (Extended Data Fig. 7), consistent with a recent cytogenetics preprint 20 . Notably, stratum 4 is specific to the zebra finch species and stratum 5 to the Australian zebra finch subspecies (Fig.…”
Section: Textsupporting
confidence: 68%
“…The zebra finch genome was one of the closest related species for which the genome was assembled at the chromosomal level. Although this species counts 40 pairs of chromosomes and one germline restricted chromosome (Biederman et al, ; Torgasheva et al, ), only 37 chromosomes and scaffolds were assembled in Ensembl zebra finch karyotype (Figure ).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The sea lamprey ( Petromyzon marinus ) possesses a distinctive mechanism of differentiating somatic and germline lineages that is achieved by discarding large portions of the genome during early stages of development [1, 2]. Similar largescale changes in genome content and structure have been described in several groups of phylogenetically diverse organisms [3] including: ciliates [4-6], nematodes [7, 8], sciarid flies (reviewed in [9]), copepods [10], chironomids [11], several hagfish species [12-15], songbirds [16, 17], and at least two lamprey species [18, 19]. These changes in genome content/structure are generally known as programmed genome rearrangement (PGR).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 82%
“…as observed in nematodes, copepods, chironomids, sciarid flies and lampreys). This general pattern can be divided into nonexclusive two categories: chromosome elimination per se that involves the removal of whole intact chromosomes (hagfish [20], sciarid flies [9] and song birds [16, 17, 21]) and chromatin diminution which includes steps of excision and rejoining, or telomere restoration (roundworms [22, 23], copepods [24, 25], chironomids [26] and some hagfish [27]).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%