Publication details

Phased Assembly of Neo-Sex Chromosomes Reveals Extensive Y Degeneration and Rapid Genome Evolution in Rumex hastatulus

Authors

SACCHI Bianca HUMPHRIES Zoë KRUŽLICOVÁ Jana BODLÁKOVÁ Markéta PYNE Cassandre CHOUDHURY Baharul I GONG Yunchen BAČOVSKÝ Václav HOBZA Roman BARRETT Spencer C H WRIGHT Stephen I

Year of publication 2024
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Molecular Biology and Evolution
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation
Web https://academic.oup.com/mbe/article/41/4/msae074/7644656
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msae074
Keywords sex chromosomes; plants; genomics; transposable elements
Description Y chromosomes are thought to undergo progressive degeneration due to stepwise loss of recombination and subsequent reduction in selection efficiency. However, the timescales and evolutionary forces driving degeneration remain unclear. To investigate the evolution of sex chromosomes on multiple timescales, we generated a high-quality phased genome assembly of the massive older (<10 MYA) and neo (<200,000 yr) sex chromosomes in the XYY cytotype of the dioecious plant Rumex hastatulus and a hermaphroditic outgroup Rumex salicifolius. Our assemblies, supported by fluorescence in situ hybridization, confirmed that the neo-sex chromosomes were formed by two key events: an X-autosome fusion and a reciprocal translocation between the homologous autosome and the Y chromosome. The enormous sex-linked regions of the X (296 Mb) and two Y chromosomes (503 Mb) both evolved from large repeat-rich genomic regions with low recombination; however, the complete loss of recombination on the Y still led to over 30% gene loss and major rearrangements. In the older sex-linked region, there has been a significant increase in transposable element abundance, even into and near genes. In the neo-sex-linked regions, we observed evidence of extensive rearrangements without gene degeneration and loss. Overall, we inferred significant degeneration during the first 10 million years of Y chromosome evolution but not on very short timescales. Our results indicate that even when sex chromosomes emerge from repetitive regions of already-low recombination, the complete loss of recombination on the Y chromosome still leads to a substantial increase in repetitive element content and gene degeneration.

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