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It's a Trap?! Escape from an ancient, ancestral sex chromosome system and implication of Foxl2 as the putative primary sex determining gene in a lizard (Anguimorpha; Shinisauridae).
Pinto, Brendan J; Nielsen, Stuart V; Sullivan, Kathryn A; Behere, Ashmika; Keating, Shannon E; van Schingen-Khan, Mona; Nguyen, Truong Quang; Ziegler, Thomas; Pramuk, Jennifer; Wilson, Melissa A; Gamble, Tony.
Afiliación
  • Pinto BJ; School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ USA.
  • Nielsen SV; Center for Evolution and Medicine, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ USA.
  • Sullivan KA; Department of Zoology, Milwaukee Public Museum, Milwaukee, WI USA.
  • Behere A; Department of Biological Sciences, Museum of Life Sciences, Louisiana State University-Shreveport, Shreveport, LA USA.
  • Keating SE; Florida Museum of Natural History, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL USA.
  • van Schingen-Khan M; Department of Zoology, Milwaukee Public Museum, Milwaukee, WI USA.
  • Nguyen TQ; Department of Biological Sciences, Marquette University, Milwaukee WI USA.
  • Ziegler T; Department of Biological Sciences, Marquette University, Milwaukee WI USA.
  • Pramuk J; Department of Biological Sciences, Marquette University, Milwaukee WI USA.
  • Wilson MA; Federal Agency for Nature Conservation, CITES Scientific Authority, Konstantinstraße 110, 53179 Bonn, Germany.
  • Gamble T; Institute of Ecology and Biological Resources, Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology, 18 Hoang Quoc Viet Road, Hanoi 10072, Vietnam.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Oct 26.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37461522
ABSTRACT
Although sex determination is ubiquitous in vertebrates, mechanisms of sex determination vary from environmentally- to genetically-influenced. In vertebrates, genetic sex determination is typically accomplished with sex chromosomes. Groups like mammals maintain conserved sex chromosome systems, while sex chromosomes in most vertebrate clades aren't conserved across similar evolutionary timescales. One group inferred to have an evolutionarily stable mode of sex determination is Anguimorpha, a clade of charismatic taxa including monitor lizards, Gila monsters, and crocodile lizards. The common ancestor of extant anguimorphs possessed a ZW system that has been retained across the clade. However, the sex chromosome system in the endangered, monotypic family of crocodile lizards (Shinisauridae) has remained elusive. Here, we analyze genomic data to demonstrate that Shinisaurus has replaced the ancestral anguimorph ZW system on LG7 chromosome with a novel ZW system on LG3. The linkage group LG3 corresponds to chromosome 9 in chicken, and this is the first documented use of this syntenic block as a sex chromosome in amniotes. Additionally, this ~1Mb region harbors approximately 10 genes, including a duplication of the sex-determining transcription factor, Foxl2-critical for the determination and maintenance of sexual differentiation in vertebrates, and thus a putative primary sex determining gene for Shinisaurus.