ZW sex chromosome differentiation in paleognathous birds is associated with mitochondrial effective population size but not mitochondrial genome size or mutation rate.
Brooke Weinstein, Zongji Wang, Qi Zhou, Scott William Roy
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Eukaryotic genome size varies considerably, even among closely related species. The causes of this variation are unclear, but weak selection against supposedly costly "extra" genomic sequences has been central to the debate for over 50 years. The mutational hazard hypothesis, which focuses on the increased mutation rate to null alleles in superfluous sequences, is particularly influential, though challenging to test. This study examines the sex chromosomes and mitochondrial genomes of 15 flightless or semi-flighted paleognathous bird species. In this clade, the non-recombining portion of the W chromosome has independently expanded stepwise in multiple lineages. Given the shared maternal inheritance of the W chromosome and mitochondria, theory predicts that mitochondrial effective population size (Ne) should decrease due to increased Hill-Robertson Interference in lineages with expanded non-recombining W regions. Our findings support the extent of the non-recombining W region with three indicators of reduced selective efficiency: (1) the ratio of non-synonymous to synonymous nucleotide changes in the mitochondrion, (2) the probability of radical amino acid changes, and (3) the number of ancient, W-linked genes lost through evolution. Next, we tested whether reduced Ne affects mitochondrial genome size, as predicted by weak selection against genome expansion. We find no support for a relationship between mitochondrial genome size and expanded non-recombining W regions, nor with increased mitochondrial mutation rates (predicted to modulate selective costs). These results highlight the utility of non-recombining regions and mitochondrial genomes for studying genome evolution and challenge the general idea of a negative relation between the efficacy of selection and genome size.
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About the journal
Genome Biology and Evolution (GBE) publishes leading original research at the interface between evolutionary biology and genomics. Papers considered for publication report novel evolutionary findings that concern natural genome diversity, population genomics, the structure, function, organisation and expression of genomes, comparative genomics, proteomics, and environmental genomic interactions. Major evolutionary insights from the fields of computational biology, structural biology, developmental biology, and cell biology are also considered, as are theoretical advances in the field of genome evolution. GBE’s scope embraces genome-wide evolutionary investigations at all taxonomic levels and for all forms of life — within populations or across domains. Its aims are to further the understanding of genomes in their evolutionary context and further the understanding of evolution from a genome-wide perspective.