Published December 6, 2018 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: A reciprocal translocation radically reshapes sex-linked inheritance in the common frog

  • 1. University of Lausanne
  • 2. The University of Texas at Austin

Description

X and Y chromosomes can diverge when rearrangements block recombination between them. Here we present the first genomic view of a reciprocal translocation that causes two physically unconnected pairs of chromosomes to be coinherited as sex chromosomes. In a population of the common frog (Rana temporaria), both pairs of X and Y chromosomes show extensive sequence differentiation, but not degeneration of the Ys. A new method based on gene trees shows both chromosomes are sex-linked. Further, the gene trees from the two Y chromosomes have identical topologies, showing they have been coinherited since the reciprocal translocation occurred. Reciprocal translocations can thus reshape sex linkage on a much grander scale than do inversions, the type of rearrangement that is much better known in sex chromosome evolution, and they can greatly amplify the power of sexually antagonistic selection to drive genomic rearrangement. Two other populations show evidence of yet other rearrangements, suggesting that this species has unprecedented structural polymorphism in its sex chromosomes.

Notes

Files

Rana.RSEM.counts.gonads.matrix.txt

Files (3.0 GB)

Name Size Download all
md5:92d6498fd084108401ff8708dba5fe8b
337.8 MB Download
md5:b93be5b4a7b79cb3543fcbb6225b3b76
293.8 MB Download
md5:8ec25a0f27fa1c7f950906f1b689d27d
27.6 MB Preview Download
md5:019d8a80e0c1254ab2b10b0808b16ff7
2.1 kB Preview Download
md5:1e8f7feb652c5401e65080373acf9a4d
367.9 MB Download
md5:edea2359a680a637fe58a667b06eed32
2.0 GB Download

Additional details

Related works

Is cited by
10.1111/mec.14990 (DOI)