Abstract

BackgroundThe origin of sex chromosomes requires the establishment of recombination suppression between the proto-sex chromosomes. In many fish species, the sex chromosome pair is homomorphic with a recent origin, providing species for studying how and why recombination suppression evolved in the initial stages of sex chromosome differentiation, but this requires accurate sequence assembly of the X and Y (or Z and W) chromosomes, which may be difficult if they are recently diverged.ResultsHere we produce a haplotype-resolved genome assembly of zig-zag eel (Mastacembelus armatus), an aquaculture fish, at the chromosomal scale. The diploid assembly is nearly gap-free, and in most chromosomes, we resolve the centromeric and subtelomeric heterochromatic sequences. In particular, the Y chromosome, including its highly repetitive short arm, has zero gaps. Using resequencing data, we identify a ~7 Mb fully sex-linked region (SLR), spanning the sex chromosome centromere and almost entirely embedded in the pericentromeric heterochromatin. The SLRs on the X and Y chromosomes are almost identical in sequence and gene content, but both are repetitive and heterochromatic, consistent with zero or low recombination. We further identify an HMG-domain containing gene HMGN6 in the SLR as a candidate sex-determining gene that is expressed at the onset of testis development.ConclusionsOur study supports the idea that preexisting regions of low recombination, such as pericentromeric regions, can give rise to SLR in the absence of structural variations between the proto-sex chromosomes.

Highlights

  • The origin of sex chromosomes requires the establishment of recombination suppression between the proto-sex chromosomes

  • We propose that the sex-linked region (SLR) which contains a candidate sex-determining gene HMGN6 originated from the pericentromeric region of ancestrally low recombination

  • Broad pericentromeric heterochromatin domains We explored whether autosomes have large pericentromeric regions as seen in the XY sex chromosomes

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Summary

Introduction

The origin of sex chromosomes requires the establishment of recombination suppression between the proto-sex chromosomes. The sex chromosome pair is homomorphic with a recent origin, providing species for studying how and why recombination suppression evolved in the initial stages of sex chromosome differentiation, but this requires accurate sequence assembly of the X and Y (or Z and W) chromosomes, which may be difficult if they are recently diverged. In eutherian mammals and neognathous birds the sexlimited chromosomes (Y or W) are gene-poor, highly repetitive and heterochromatic [8,9,10,11]. This degeneration process seems to be an inevitable consequence of recombination suppression [12,13,14]

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