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Genetics, Vol. 175, 1945-1954, April 2007, Copyright © 2007
doi:10.1534/genetics.106.070110
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Institute of Evolutionary Biology, School of Biological Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH9 3JT, United Kingdom
1 Corresponding author: Institute of Evolutionary Biology, School of Biological Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Ashworth Lab, King's Bldgs., West Mains Rd., Edinburgh EH9 3JT, United Kingdom.
E-mail: r.bergero{at}ed.ac.uk
| ABSTRACT |
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1020 MYA.
Due to its recent origin, the S. latifolia Y chromosome is probably in an early stage of degeneration. It is large in size, and it has been suggested that this reflects a large gene content (NEGRUTIU et al. 2001). However, this must be tested; an alternative is that the large size of the Y might reflect a highly repetitive DNA content, suggesting a stage in the degeneration process when repetitive sequences, including transposable elements, have probably accumulated, but before the stage in which most individual genes have lost function and can be deleted. The Y chromosome indeed appears to have accumulated chloroplast sequences (KEJNOVSKY et al. 2006), and there is also evidence of repetitive sequences and transposons in the S. latifolia genome (PRITHAM et al. 2003), but the extent of male-specific (Y-linked) sequence accumulation is not yet clear, although Y-specific sequences certainly exist (DONNISON and GRANT 1999). Similarly, the small Y chromosome-like region surrounding the sex-determining region in papaya (which may possibly have evolved more recently than the S. latifolia sex chromosomes) has a higher repetitive sequence content (and thus a lower gene density) than the genome as a whole (LIU et al. 2004).
To make progress in understanding sex chromosome evolution and organization in plants, and to test for genetic degeneration of Y chromosomes, sex-linked genetic markers are required. Several kinds of Y-linked genetic markers have been developed in S. latifolia, including anonymous markers such as AFLPs and RAPDs (DI STILIO et al. 1998; NAKAO et al. 2002; OBARA et al. 2002). Although it is straightforward to develop such anonymous markers, which are useful for obtaining genetic maps of the sex chromosomes (LEBEL-HARDENACK et al. 2002; MOORE et al. 2003; ZLUVOVA et al. 2005; SCOTTI and DELPH 2006), these markers provide no information about the age of the sex chromosome system or the times since recombination between the X and Y stopped in different regions of these chromosomes, nor about whether the Y chromosome is genetically degenerated or degenerating. Genic markers are thus potentially much more valuable than anonymous ones. Such markers provide access to the gene coding sequences, containing synonymous and nonsynonymous sites that are subject to different selective constraints in functional copies (GILLESPIE 1991; OHTA 1995), so that it becomes possible to estimate the divergence time between the X and Y copies and to test for genetic degeneration of Y-linked copies (GUTTMAN and CHARLESWORTH 1998; NICOLAS et al. 2005). Such studies are progressing rapidly for the neo-Y chromosome of Drosophila miranda (BACHTROG 2003; BACHTROG 2004).
Only seven genes on the Y chromosome of S. latifolia have been described after almost a decade of work (GUTTMAN and CHARLESWORTH 1998; DELICHERE et al. 1999; ATANASSOV et al. 2001; MATSUNAGA et al. 2003; MOORE et al. 2003; FILATOV 2005c; NICOLAS et al. 2005). One of these has no X counterpart, being duplicated from an autosomal gene (MATSUNAGA et al. 2003), and only one is degenerated (GUTTMAN and CHARLESWORTH 1998). The five X-linked genes so far mapped are arranged along a gradient of XY synonymous divergence (FILATOV 2005a), increasing with distance from the pseudoautosomal region (FILATOV 2005a; NICOLAS et al. 2005), although neither family allowed mapping all these genes. These findings suggest progressive steps in the cessation of recombination between the X and Y chromosomes, thus creating "evolutionary strata" on the sex chromosomes, similar to those described in mammalian X and Y chromosomes (LAHN and PAGE 1999). In the S. latifolia sex chromosomes, three divergence levels have been suggested. The two genes, SlX3/Y3 and SlX4/Y4, with the highest divergence have synonymous site divergence (Ks) >15%, while, for the least diverged pair, SlX1/Y1, Ks is only 3.6% (and intron divergence
2%), and two gene pairs, DD44X/DD44Y and SlSSX/SlSSY, have intermediate divergence (Ks
78%). With only five loci, discrete groupings of Ks values cannot be statistically significant, and the number is too low to formally test the ordering along the X chromosome of genes with different XY divergence in "evolutionary strata."
To answer these questions, and to help understand the evolution of sex chromosomes, we use straightforward genetic approaches to identify sex-linked genes in S. latifolia, based on cDNA sequences obtained from this species. By using segregation analysis of ISVS and single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), we identify four new Y-linked loci with homologs on the X chromosome. Comparison of silent site divergence between pairs of X/Y homologs, together with genetic mapping of the X-linked copies, confirm the existence of a gradient in divergence (evolutionary strata) of genes in this sex chromosome system, which is much younger than the sex chromosomes of mammals or birds.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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To reduce the cost of primer synthesis, we used the approach originally designed for microsatellite genotyping (SCHUELKE 2000), with a universal forward primer labeled with a fluorescent dye, a specific forward primer with a 5' tail complementary to the forward universal primer, and a specific reverse primer (Figure 2). The universal primer used in this study was 5'-GGTTGGAGCTAGTGTTGTG-3', which has an annealing temperature of 4°5° below those of the specific forward and reverse primers (SCHUELKE 2000). To maximize the efficiency of the TAQ polymerase transferase activity, reverse primers were designed to start with a G at the 5'-end (VOS et al. 1995), and the final 72° extension step was extended to 20 min. This guarantees that single, instead of double, peaks were observed in the capillary electrophoregrams.
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Segregation of SNPs for inferring sex linkage:
cDNA sequences that did not have significant amino acid identity with either of the At and Os genomes or lacked the predicted introns could not be analyzed by ISVS. For these, sex linkage was preliminarily tested by amplifying PCR products with primers designed from S. latifolia cDNA sequences and using PCRRFLP with a panel of restriction enzymes (HaeIII, HinfI, MboI, MseI, MspI, RsaI, and ScrFI). If no suitable polymorphism was detected, direct sequencing of PCR products was done according to FILATOV (2005c) to detect SNPs for use in segregation analyses. Primers for all loci studied are listed in supplemental Table 1 at http://www.genetics.org/supplemental/.
Amplification of 5' and 3' cDNA ends:
To obtain complete coding sequences of the sex-linked genes, we performed 5'- and 3'-RACE reactions. Total RNA was extracted from young leaves of the male plant E2004-17-1 from sibship E2004-17, using the RNeasy plant mini kit (QIAGEN, Chatsworth, CA). mRNA was purified using poly(T)-tailed Dyna-beads (Invitrogen, San Diego). First-strand cDNA synthesis was accomplished starting from 0.5 to 1 µg poly(A) RNA by using Moloney murine leukemia virus reverse transcriptase (Invitrogen) and the oligo(dT) primer (T)15VN. Two microliters of this reaction was used to obtain 3' cDNA ends by PCR using forward specific primers and the poly(T) primer. For the 5'-RACE reactions, a modified protocol of the CapSelect technique (SCHMIDT and MUELLER 1999) was used to enrich the cDNA library for complete mRNA 5'-ends. Details of the modifications can be provided on request to R. Bergero.
Sequence analysis:
PCR products of interest (sex linked or belonging to sets of paralogous loci) were cloned into a T-tailed pBSKS+ vector (MARCHUK et al. 1991) and sequenced in an ABI 3730 capillary sequencer (Applied Biosystems). Specific primers were used to obtain separate X- and Y-linked partial sequences (see below). Genomic sequences of the sex-linked gene pairs were obtained from male E2004-17-1 (see Table 1), and exon/intron boundaries were inferred on the basis of comparison with the cDNA sequences and gene structures of orthologous At genes.
Sequences were first aligned with Sequencer v. 4.5 (GeneCodes, Ann Arbor, MI) and then manually adjusted using the sequence alignment editor Se-Al v. 2.0a11 (Se-Al: Sequence Alignment Editor, http://evolve.zoo.ox.ac.uk/). Sequence divergence values were computed using the package DnaSP v. 3.99 (ROZAS and ROZAS 1999). Sequence data from cDNA clones and sex-linked loci were deposited in GenBank (accession nos. DV768193DV768364 and EF408657EF408664).
Genetic mapping:
Segregation of molecular markers (indels and SNPs) located within X-linked loci and polymorphic in the maternal genotype were scored in the male and female parents and in 92 progeny plants of an F2 family (see above) and used to build a linkage map of the newly identified loci together with the previously mapped ones. The pseudoautosomal marker OPA (FILATOV 2005a; NICOLAS et al. 2005) was mapped in our F2 family, as well as the SlX4 locus, the most distantly located gene at the other end of the X chromosome in previous maps of two families (FILATOV 2005a; NICOLAS et al. 2005); we also included SlX3. The Kosambi mapping function was used for computing genetic distances in centimorgans.
| RESULTS |
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Intron size variants were first scored in the parental individuals of several families (Table 1). Sixty-eight percent of the introns had a size polymorphism in at least one parental male and one parental female (supplemental Table 2 at http://www.genetics.org/supplemental/). Segregation patterns of these variants were scored in the F1 families to distinguish sex-linked and autosomal loci. In a few cases, paralogous loci amplified, and the progeny did not show a simple biallelic pattern. For two of them, no clear interpretation of segregation results was evident (clones 09B11 and 11D10, where a band common to both parents was not found in some of the offspring). The others were analyzed as small gene families, which is straightforward using ISVS (see supplemental Table 2 at http://www.genetics.org/supplemental/).
For those EST sequences that could not be analyzed by ISVS, sex linkage was tested by SNP segregation using PCRRFLP analysis. Inference of sex linkage or autosomal inheritance (supplemental Table 3 at http://www.genetics.org/supplemental/) was conclusive for only 47% of the genes tested. For the other clones, there was either no polymorphism or the analysis was inconclusive, often because of amplification of related loci, a common difficulty when attempting to analyze a genome as large and complex as this; the 1C DNA content is estimated to be 2646 Mb (COSTICH et al. 1991). Overall, ISVS was thus superior to SNP segregation analysis in efficacy and simplicity for testing sex linkage, particularly because it allows segregation analysis in the presence of paralogous loci.
Two Y-linked genes identified by ISVS:
SlCypX/Y:
Clone 09C11 yielded a sequence containing an ORF of 623 amino acids, showing 80% amino acid identity to the A. thaliana peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase locus, Cyp2 (At3g44600). ISVS using primers flanking introns 2 and 3 showed clear segregation patterns consistent with X and Y linkage (Figure 3; supplemental Table 2 at http://www.genetics.org/supplemental/). Coding sequences of the Y-linked genomic fragments unambiguously matched the cDNA sequence 09C11 (Ks = 0.2%, Ka = 0), showing that the Y-homolog is actively transcribed. This gene was named SlCypY and its X-linked counterpart was named SlCypX.
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A third Y-linked gene, SlX7/SlY7, identified by SNP analysis:
A SNP scorable by the restriction enzyme Hsp92II was detected in partial genomic sequences amplified with primers designed on the sequence of the cDNA clone 11F03. This corresponds to an ORF of 348 amino acids showing 75% amino acid identity with an A. thaliana unknown protein (locus AT5G48020) for 95% of its ORF. Segregation analysis of a Hsp92II restriction site showed Y linkage of sequences containing the Hsp92II restriction site. Segregation of a SNP causing a nonsynonymous substitution (I
S) in sequences lacking the Hsp92II restriction site indicated X linkage (Figure 5). Coding sequences of the X-linked genomic fragments matched the cDNA sequence 11F03 (1% divergence). This X- and Y-linked gene pair was named SlX7/SlY7.
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For the Y homologs of SlCyp and Sl7, the sequences do not suggest any evidence of sequence degeneration, such as premature stop codons or indels causing frameshifts. Sequence divergence estimates between X/Y pairs are shown in Table 2. The synonymous site divergence (Ks) between SlX7 and SlY7 is estimated to be 24.0%, similar to that of the most diverged S. latifolia sex-linked gene pair so far reported (SlX4/SlY4); the value for silent sites (both synonymous coding sequence sites and noncoding sequences) was lower (Ksilent = 14.9%). For SlCypX vs. SlCypY, Ks is 6.1% (Table 2). Nonsynonymous site divergence for both genes was much lower than synonymous site divergence (Table 2), suggesting that the Y-linked copies are functional.
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Between either SlX6a and SlY6a or SlX6b and SlY6b, Ka is low (Table 2), indicating selective constraint on both sequences, so that even the highly diverged Y-linked gene must encode a functional protein; again, no premature stop codons or frameshifts were found in the almost complete coding sequences obtained for the locus SlY6b and the partial coding sequence obtained for SlY6a. Neither SlX6a nor SlY6a matched the cDNA sequence (Ks's are 12.6 and 21.8%, respectively), whereas there is only one synonymous substitution between the cDNA sequence and the SlX6b coding sequence. This suggests that the SlX6b locus is the source of the cDNA sequence.
All eight loci now mapped on the X chromosome are shown in Figure 7, including both of the two most extreme markers so far mapped (the pseudoautosomal marker and SlX4, at the other end of the X; see NICOLAS et al. 2005), and the map includes a large genetic distance (58 cM). The two loci with the highest XY divergence (SlX7 and SlX6a) are closely linked to SlX4, which has a similar XY Ks. This establishes a reliable upper limit for XY divergence (i.e., for the region of oldest XY divergence, or evolutionary stratum I of the X). The SlCypX locus, with an intermediate XY divergence, maps distantly from these genes, and only 10 cM from the pseudoautosomal marker (NICOLAS et al. 2005), close to the SlX1 gene. The XY divergence values differ significantly between these two groups of loci (the 95% confidence intervals are 3.898.15 and 19.623.2, respectively), and divergence from the Y loci (Ks) suggests two distinctly separated clusters (Figure 7), possibly corresponding to distinct strata. With the current number of loci, we did not test for discontinuity between the strata.
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| DISCUSSION |
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The lack of known degenerate Y-linked genes does not, however, necessarily imply that the S. latifolia X and Y chromosomes have similar gene content or that the Y has not lost genes that are present on the X. To estimate the proportion of genes carried on the X chromosome that are also present on the Y, the proportion of these that have degenerated copies, and the forms of degeneration that have occurred, genes need to be ascertained from X linkage or from unbiased mapping of S. latifolia. X linkage is, however, more difficult to establish than Y linkage, because informative markers distinguishing different X-linked alleles in mapping families are scarce. In contrast, Y-specific molecular markers (indels and SNPs) are much more common, because the evolutionary time since recombination has ceased between the X and Y in most species is long enough that divergence is considerable (several percent, for most S. latifolia XY pairs; see Figure 7 and FILATOV 2005b; NICOLAS et al. 2005). X-linked genes with deleted or silenced Y counterparts could therefore easily escape detection in segregation analyses of short genomic sequences of only a few hundred base pairs.
Our results nevertheless support previous evidence that there is considerable homology between the S. latifolia X and Y chromosomes. So far, only one Y-linked gene, SlAp3, has been reported to have only an autosomal homolog (MATSUNAGA et al. 2003). The situation is thus different from that in the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, in which all Y-linked genes appear to have autosomal origins (CARVALHO 2002), and in the primate Y chromosomes, which carry both X-homologous and transposed genes (VALLENDER and LAHN 2004). The ascertainment of X-linked genes and searches for homologous Y-linked sequences are necessary to clarify the relative frequencies of the two components in the S. latifolia Y chromosome.
Evolutionary strata on the sex chromosomes:
The eight X-linked genes now mapped are arranged along a gradient of XY silent site divergence, increasing with distance from the pseudoautosomal region, as was previously suggested (FILATOV 2005a; NICOLAS et al. 2005); our results show that this pattern is statistically significant and that it is consistent in three S. latifolia mapping families. The slight differences in map intervals in the different families are within the range expected from sampling error, given the family sizes, and do not suggest any differences in the gene orders in different plants of this species, whereas the X of S. dioica has a region inverted relative to the S. latifolia arrangement (FILATOV 2005a; NICOLAS et al. 2005).
These findings suggest progressive steps in the cessation of recombination between the X and Y chromosomes, thus creating "evolutionary strata" on the sex chromosomes, like those in mammalian X and Y chromosomes (LAHN and PAGE 1999) and in the Z and W chromosomes of the chicken (LAWSON-HANDLEY et al. 2004). Our divergence results support previous evidence that the S. latifolia sex chromosomes are of much more recent origin than the youngest of the human X chromosome evolutionary strata (>30 MY), dating the cessation of recombination between the Y and the X to
1020 MYA (FILATOV 2005a; NICOLAS et al. 2005). If an inversion was involved in stopping XY recombination, a sharp break in divergence should characterize the "strata." More genes will probably be needed before it becomes clear whether these "strata" are truly discontinuous. Even in the human sex chromosomes, some boundaries are not distinct (SKALETSKY et al. 2003).
Our divergence estimates between the paralogous loci SlX6a/Y6a and SlX6b/Y6b suggest that the two gene pairs stopped recombining at different times, and, for both, the time is consistent with their location in the X chromosome genetic map. The divergence between the two SlY6 copies (SlY6a and SlY6b) is similar to the raw divergence between the highly diverged SlX6a/Y6a pair, suggesting similar divergence times. Thus the duplication that created SlY6a and SlY6b probably occurred soon after the X and Y chromosomes ceased recombining in the region where the SlY6a gene is located (although the standard errors of these estimates imply some uncertainty, and data on diversity among the SlX6a and among the SlY6a and SlY6b sequences will be necessary to estimate net divergence and to better assess the XY divergence times). If so, this event may have been associated with the formation of the Y chromosome, perhaps increasing its size, but at present it is unknown whether other loci were also duplicated.
It will be of interest to verify whether recombination suppression was caused by chromosomal rearrangements such as inversions on the Y or by other mechanisms. Deletion mapping of Y-linked genes will help to further test the possibility of an inversion on the S. latifolia Y with respect to the X chromosome arrangement (ZLUVOVA et al. 2005). Any duplications, such as that found for the SlX6/Y6 genes (which, as just suggested, may have involved other loci), will cause difficulties when attempting to develop a Y deletion map, and it will be important to use sensitive methods, like those developed here, to distinguish between paralogous copies of loci to be mapped. This suggests that genic markers will be necessary to map the Y.
Markers for autosomal loci and genes in gene families:
ISVS and other similar approaches recently reported (FELTUS et al. 2006) will be valuable for obtaining markers in nonmodel systems. In addition to efficiently allowing us to infer sex linkage, ISVS yielded polymorphic autosomal loci. Sixty-four percent of these followed a typical biallelic pattern, representing single-copy codominant markers ideal for genetic mapping. Multiple bands, however, were sometimes obtained, and segregation analysis then clearly indicated independently segregating markers, probably representing PCR amplicons from paralogous genes. The ability to work with gene families is a great advantage of the ISVS approach. Discrimination between paralogues and allelic sequence variants is important when developing markers for genetic mapping, but also in other situations. Incorrect phylogenies can be generated by using gene sequences from unrecognized paralogues (reviewed in SHAKHNOVICH and KOONIN 2006). A method for checking for the presence of paralogous genes in PCR amplification products is thus often needed. Multiple copies differing in length by a few base pairs can often be missed entirely by just examining PCR bands in agarose gel. Moreover, recombinant sequences can be obtained during PCR amplification (BRADLEY and HILLIS 1997) and cloning of these recombinant artifacts can readily cause confusion between alleles and paralogous sequences unless segregation analysis is performed.
When analyzing plants with large genomes and with highly repetitive sequence content, such as S. latifolia (LENGEROVA et al. 2004), it is important to check genetically that a sequence is single copy to obtain markers that can be scored reliably for genetic mapping. Because paralogous genes often accumulate indel differences in introns during the course of evolution (since they may recombine with one another rarely or not at all), typing by length differences can provide a simple way to get markers for such genetic tests. Gene conversion between paralogues may hinder analysis of some gene families, especially when their sequences are similar and when they are tandemly duplicated (GAO and INNAN 2004; THOMAS 2006), but ISVS analysis can be very helpful provided that concerted evolution has not homogenized the sequences of paralogues. In S. latifolia, ISVS could quickly distinguish genes with good marker potential (single-copy genes or small gene families) from cDNAs whose primers yielded too many bands for analysis. Intron-spanning primers designed from less conserved amino acid regions sometimes increased specificity and amplified fewer loci, and again ISVS analysis provided a quick way to test such alternative primers.
The ISVS approach is, of course, limited by the availability of indels. Indels are frequent in noncoding sequences of genes sampled from outcrossing plant populations (LIU et al. 1998, 1999) and in many other organisms (reviewed in MILLS et al. 2006), but length differences are not guaranteed in any given intron between alleles or paralogues, especially recent duplicates. This approach should nevertheless be useful in other nonmodel organisms where it can help with the important but laborious task of distinguishing single-copy loci from gene families.
| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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