4.3 Article

Chromosome-Level Genome Assembly Reveals Dynamic Sex Chromosomes in Neotropical Leaf-Litter Geckos (Sphaerodactylidae: Sphaerodactylus)

Journal

JOURNAL OF HEREDITY
Volume 113, Issue 3, Pages 272-287

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/jhered/esac016

Keywords

genome evolution; genomics; herpetology; sex chromosomes; sex determination

Funding

  1. Helen T. and Frederick M. Gaige fund [2018] (American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists: ASIH)
  2. Marquette University (MU)
  3. American Genetic Association (AGA) - Ecological, Evolutionary, and Conservation Genomics (EECG) Research Award
  4. MU laboratory startup funds
  5. National Science Foundation (NSF) [DEB1110605, DEB0920892]
  6. NSF [DEB1657662, IOS1146820]
  7. Department of Biological Sciences Graduate Research Fellowship (MU
  8. 2018-2020)
  9. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [2R01GM116853-05]
  10. Catherine Grotelueschen Scholarship (MU
  11. 2019)
  12. Denis J. O'Brien Summer Research Fellowship [2018] (MU)

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Sex determination is a critical aspect of vertebrate development, and the stability of sex chromosome systems across different lineages is of evolutionary importance. While mammals and birds have conserved sex chromosome systems, reptiles such as gecko lizards have undergone frequent sex chromosome transitions, making their phylogenetic understanding incomplete. In this study, researchers assembled a chromosome-level genome for a gecko species and used various genomic techniques to investigate sex chromosomes in closely related species. The results revealed multiple sex chromosome transitions and identified previously unknown sex chromosome systems. This study highlights the flexibility of sex chromosome evolution in gecko lizards and adds to our understanding of the evolutionary processes involved.
Sex determination is a critical element of successful vertebrate development, suggesting that sex chromosome systems might be evolutionarily stable across lineages. For example, mammals and birds have maintained conserved sex chromosome systems over long evolutionary time periods. Other vertebrates, in contrast, have undergone frequent sex chromosome transitions, which is even more amazing considering we still know comparatively little across large swaths of their respective phylogenies. One reptile group in particular, the gecko lizards (infraorder Gekkota), shows an exceptional lability with regard to sex chromosome transitions and may possess the majority of transitions within squamates (lizards and snakes). However, detailed genomic and cytogenetic information about sex chromosomes is lacking for most gecko species, leaving large gaps in our understanding of the evolutionary processes at play. To address this, we assembled a chromosome-level genome for a gecko (Sphaerodactylidae: Sphaerodactylus) and used this assembly to search for sex chromosomes among six closely related species using a variety of genomic data, including whole-genome re-sequencing, RADseq, and RNAseq. Previous work has identified XY systems in two species of Sphaerodactylus geckos. We expand upon that work to identify between two and four sex chromosome cis-transitions (XY to a new XY) within the genus. Interestingly, we confirmed two different linkage groups as XY sex chromosome systems that were previously unknown to act as sex chromosomes in tetrapods (syntenic with Gallus chromosome 3 and Gallus chromosomes 18/30/33), further highlighting a unique and fascinating trend that most linkage groups have the potential to act as sex chromosomes in squamates.

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