2013
DOI: 10.1111/evo.12151
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Homologous Sex Chromosomes in Three Deeply Divergent Anuran Species

Abstract: Comparative genomic studies are revealing that, in sharp contrast with the strong stability found in birds and mammals, sex determination mechanisms are surprisingly labile in cold-blooded vertebrates, with frequent transitions between different pairs of sex chromosomes. It was recently suggested that, in context of this high turnover, some chromosome pairs might be more likely than others to be co-opted as sex chromosomes. Empirical support, however, is still very limited. Here we show that sex-linked markers… Show more

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Cited by 78 publications
(102 citation statements)
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References 49 publications
(73 reference statements)
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“…If the X and Y chromosomes show significant genetic differentiation, heterozygosity will be higher in the male than the female for that chromosome only. By plotting male-informative markers against female-informative markers for each of 12 linkage groups, we show that linkage group 1 is an outlier with nearly three times as many male-information as female-informative markers, consistent with previous studies (Berset-Brändli et al, 2008;Brelsford et al, 2013) identifying this as the sex chromosome.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
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“…If the X and Y chromosomes show significant genetic differentiation, heterozygosity will be higher in the male than the female for that chromosome only. By plotting male-informative markers against female-informative markers for each of 12 linkage groups, we show that linkage group 1 is an outlier with nearly three times as many male-information as female-informative markers, consistent with previous studies (Berset-Brändli et al, 2008;Brelsford et al, 2013) identifying this as the sex chromosome.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…Marker order is conserved on the linkage group 1, with the exception of a small region. Brelsford et al (2013) Figure 1 Linkage group 1, the sex chromosome in H. arborea, contains nearly three times as many informative markers on the male-specific map compared with the female-specific map. The 11 autosomal linkage groups fall close to the dashed line, illustrating equal marker numbers between the sexes.…”
Section: Linkage Mappingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…LG 2 maps to Xt chromosome 1 (Brelsford et al, 2013(Brelsford et al, , 2016 that contains the candidate sex-determining genes Dmrt1 and Amh. The former is thought to determine sex in birds (Smith et al, 2009), whereas paralogs play this role in species of fish and frogs (Matsuda et al, 2002;Nanda et al, 2002;Yoshimoto et al, 2010).…”
Section: Lindragenmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Accordingly, the translocation events documented here in polyploid green toads contrast with the strong synteny that otherwise characterizes diploid species from this group, and amphibians in general (e.g., Miura, 1995;Sumida and Nishioka, 2000;Brelsford et al, 2013). It might also be meaningful that such translocations were limited not only to the paternal subgenomes, but also to the supposed sex-chromosome pairs.…”
Section: Bac212mentioning
confidence: 56%