Abstract

Faster evolution of X chromosomes has been documented in several species and results from the increased efficiency of selection on recessive alleles in hemizygous males and/or from increased drift due to the smaller effective population size of X chromosomes. Aphids are excellent models for evaluating the importance of selection in faster-X evolution, because their peculiar life-cycle and unusual inheritance of sex-chromosomes lead to equal effective population sizes for X and autosomes. Because we lack a high-density genetic map for the pea aphid whose complete genome has been sequenced, we assigned its entire genome to the X and autosomes based on ratios of sequencing depth in males and females. Unexpectedly, we found frequent scaffold misassembly, but we could unambiguously locate 13,726 genes on the X and 19,263 on autosomes. We found higher non-synonymous to synonymous substitutions ratios (dN/dS) for X-linked than for autosomal genes. Our analyses of substitution rates together with polymorphism and expression data showed that relaxed selection is likely to contribute predominantly to faster-X as a large fraction of X-linked genes are expressed at low rates and thus escape selection. Yet, a minor role for positive selection is also suggested by the difference between substitution rates for X and autosomes for male-biased genes (but not for asexual female-biased genes) and by lower Tajima's D for X-linked than for autosomal genes with highly male-biased expression patterns. This study highlights the relevance of organisms displaying alternative inheritance of chromosomes to the understanding of forces shaping genome evolution.

Details

Title
Disentangling The Causes For Faster-X Evolution In Aphids
Author
Jaquiery, Julie; Peccoud, Jean; Ouisse, Tiphaine; Legeai, Fabrice; Prunier-Leterme, Nathalie; Gouin, Anais; Nouhaud, Pierre; Brisson, Jennifer; Bickel, Ryan; Purandare, Swapna; Poulain, Julie; Battail, Christophe; Lemaitre, Claire; Mieuzet, Lucie; Gael Le Trionnaire; Simon, Jean-Christophe; Rispe, Claude
University/institution
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
Section
New Results
Publication year
2017
Publication date
May 10, 2017
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
ISSN
2692-8205
Source type
Working Paper
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2071164814
Copyright
�� 2017. This article is published under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (���the License���). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.