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
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.