4.5 Article

ZW, XY, and yet ZW: Sex chromosome evolution in snakes even more complicated

Journal

EVOLUTION
Volume 72, Issue 8, Pages 1701-1707

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/evo.13543

Keywords

Heterochiasmy; heteromorphic sex chromosomes; reptiles; sex determination; Squamata

Funding

  1. Grant Agency of Charles University [GAUK 1073416]
  2. Charles University PRIMUS Research Program [PRIMUS/SCI/46]
  3. Czech Science Foundation [17-22141Y]
  4. Charles University Research Centre program [204069]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Snakes are historically important in the formulation of several central concepts on the evolution of sex chromosomes. For over 50 years, it was believed that all snakes shared the same ZZ/ZW sex chromosomes, which are homomorphic and poorly differentiated in basal snakes such as pythons and boas, while heteromorphic and well differentiated in advanced (caenophidian) snakes. Recent molecular studies revealed that differentiated sex chromosomes are indeed shared among all families of caenophidian snakes, but that boas and pythons evolved likely independently male heterogamety (XX/XY sex chromosomes). The historical report of heteromorphic ZZ/ZW sex chromosomes in a bold snake was previously regarded as ambiguous. In the current study, we document heteromorphic ZZ/ZW sex chromosomes in a boid snake. A comparative approach suggests that these heteromorphic sex chromosomes evolved very recently and that they are poorly differentiated at the sequence level. Interestingly, two snake lineages with confirmed male heterogamety possess homomorphic sex chromosomes, but heteromorphic sex chromosomes are present in both snake lineages with female heterogamety. We point out that this phenomenon is more common across squamates. The presence of female heterogamety in non-caenophidian snakes indicates that the evolution of sex chromosomes in this lineage is much more complex than previously thought, making snakes an even better model system for the evolution of sex chromosomes.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available