Complex evolutionary trajectories of sex chromosomes across bird taxa.

dc.contributor.author

Zhou, Qi

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Zhang, Jilin

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Bachtrog, Doris

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An, Na

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Huang, Quanfei

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Jarvis, Erich D

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Gilbert, M Thomas P

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Zhang, Guojie

dc.coverage.spatial

United States

dc.date.accessioned

2015-12-11T01:49:46Z

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2014-12-12

dc.description.abstract

Sex-specific chromosomes, like the W of most female birds and the Y of male mammals, usually have lost most genes owing to a lack of recombination. We analyze newly available genomes of 17 bird species representing the avian phylogenetic range, and find that more than half of them do not have as fully degenerated W chromosomes as that of chicken. We show that avian sex chromosomes harbor tremendous diversity among species in their composition of pseudoautosomal regions and degree of Z/W differentiation. Punctuated events of shared or lineage-specific recombination suppression have produced a gradient of "evolutionary strata" along the Z chromosome, which initiates from the putative avian sex-determining gene DMRT1 and ends at the pseudoautosomal region. W-linked genes are subject to ongoing functional decay after recombination was suppressed, and the tempo of degeneration slows down in older strata. Overall, we unveil a complex history of avian sex chromosome evolution.

dc.identifier

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25504727

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346/6215/1246338

dc.identifier.eissn

1095-9203

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/11148

dc.language

eng

dc.publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

dc.relation.ispartof

Science

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10.1126/science.1246338

dc.subject

Animals

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Avian Proteins

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Biological Evolution

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Birds

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Chickens

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Chromosome Inversion

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Chromosome Mapping

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Evolution, Molecular

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Female

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Male

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Phylogeny

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Recombination, Genetic

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Sex Chromosomes

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Species Specificity

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Struthioniformes

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Synteny

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Transcription Factors

dc.title

Complex evolutionary trajectories of sex chromosomes across bird taxa.

dc.type

Journal article

pubs.author-url

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25504727

pubs.begin-page

1246338

pubs.issue

6215

pubs.organisational-group

Basic Science Departments

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Duke

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Duke Institute for Brain Sciences

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Institutes and Provost's Academic Units

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Neurobiology

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School of Medicine

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University Institutes and Centers

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

346

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