A chromosome-level genome assembly enables the identification of the follicule stimulating hormone receptor as the master sex-determining gene in the flatfish Solea senegalensis
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Herrán Moreno, Roberto De La; Robles Rodríguez, Francisca; Navajas Pérez, Rafael; Ruiz Rejón, CarmeloEditorial
Wiley
Materia
Follicule stimulating hormone receptor Genetic map Senegalese sole Sex determination Whole genome sequencing
Fecha
2023-01-01Referencia bibliográfica
de la Herrán, R... [et al.] (2023). A chromosome-level genome assembly enables the identification of the follicule stimulating hormone receptor as the master sex-determining gene in the flatfish Solea senegalensis. Molecular Ecology Resources, 00, 1– 19. [https://doi.org/10.1111/1755-0998.13750]
Patrocinador
Spanish Government 81792 P20-00938 RTI2018-096847-B-C21; European Commission 81792; Junta de Andalucia-FEDER Grant P20-00938; Spanish Government; European Commission RTI2018-096847-B-C21 RTI2018-096847-B- C22; Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness; Junta de AndaluciaResumen
Sex determination (SD) shows huge variation among fish and a high evolutionary rate,
as illustrated by the Pleuronectiformes (flatfishes). This order is characterized by its
adaptation to demersal life, compact genomes and diversity of SD mechanisms. Here,
we assembled the Solea senegalensis genome, a flatfish of great commercial value,
into 82 contigs (614 Mb) combining long-and
short-read
sequencing, which were next
scaffolded using a highly dense genetic map (28,838 markers, 21 linkage groups),
representing 98.9% of the assembly. Further, we established the correspondence between the assembly and the 21 chromosomes by using BAC-FISH.
Whole genome
resequencing of six males and six females enabled the identification of 41 single nucleotide
polymorphism variants in the follicle stimulating hormone receptor (fshr) consistent
with an XX/XY SD system. The observed sex association was validated in a
broader independent sample, providing a novel molecular sexing tool. The fshr gene
displayed differential expression between male and female gonads from 86 days post-fertilization,
when the gonad is still an undifferentiated primordium, concomitant with
the activation of amh and cyp19a1a, testis and ovary marker genes, respectively, in
males and females. The Y-linked
fshr allele, which included 24 nonsynonymous variants
and showed a highly divergent 3D protein structure, was overexpressed in males
compared to the X-linked
allele at all stages of gonadal differentiation. We hypothesize
a mechanism hampering the action of the follicle stimulating hormone driving
the undifferentiated gonad toward testis.