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Evolutionary Strata on the Chicken Z Chromosome: Implications for Sex Chromosome Evolution

Lori-Jayne Lawson Handley, +2 more
- 01 May 2004 - 
- Vol. 167, Iss: 1, pp 367-376
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TLDR
The Z-W sex chromosomes of birds are studied to investigate the “strata” hypothesis in birds and suggest that progressive and stepwise cessation of recombination is a general feature behind sex chromosome evolution.
Abstract
The human X chromosome exhibits four "evolutionary strata," interpreted to represent distinct steps in the process whereby recombination became arrested between the proto X and proto Y. To test if this is a general feature of sex chromosome evolution, we studied the Z-W sex chromosomes of birds, which have female rather than male heterogamety and evolved from a different autosome pair than the mammalian X and Y. Here we analyze all five known gametologous Z-W gene pairs to investigate the "strata" hypothesis in birds. Comparisons of the rates of synonymous substitution and intronic divergence between Z and W gametologs reveal the presence of at least two evolutionary strata spread over the p and q arms of the chicken Z chromosome. A phylogenetic analysis of intronic sequence data from different avian lineages indicates that Z-W recombination ceased in the oldest stratum (on Zq; CHD1Z, HINTZ, and SPINZ) 102-170 million years ago (MYA), before the split of the Neoaves and Eoaves. However, recombination continued in the second stratum (on Zp; UBAP2Z and ATP5A1Z) until after the divergence of extant avian orders, with Z and W diverging 58-85 MYA. Our data suggest that progressive and stepwise cessation of recombination is a general feature behind sex chromosome evolution.

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Citations
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Steps in the evolution of heteromorphic sex chromosomes

TL;DR: Evidence that recombination suppression occurs progressively in evolutionarily independent cases is reviewed, suggesting that selection drives loss of recombination over increasingly large regions.
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The evolution of sex-biased genes and sex-biased gene expression.

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Y-chromosome evolution: emerging insights into processes of Y-chromosome degeneration

TL;DR: Comparison of young and old Y chromosomes has given further insights into the evolutionary and molecular forces triggering Y-chromosome degeneration and into the Darwinian destiny of the Y chromosome.
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Balancing Selection and Its Effects on Sequences in Nearby Genome Regions

TL;DR: New sequence data being gathered from genes in which polymorphisms are known to be maintained by selection can be interpreted in conjunction with results from population genetics models that include recombination between selected sites and nearby neutral marker variants.
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In Posidonia oceanica cadmium induces changes in DNA methylation and chromatin patterning

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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