Genomic evidence of neo-sex chromosomes in the eastern yellow robin

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Genomic evidence of neo-sex chromosomes in the eastern yellow robin. / Gan, Han Ming; Falk, Stephanie; Morales, Hernán E; Austin, Christopher M; Sunnucks, Paul; Pavlova, Alexandra.

In: GigaScience, Vol. 8, No. 9, 01.09.2019.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Gan, HM, Falk, S, Morales, HE, Austin, CM, Sunnucks, P & Pavlova, A 2019, 'Genomic evidence of neo-sex chromosomes in the eastern yellow robin', GigaScience, vol. 8, no. 9. https://doi.org/10.1093/gigascience/giz111

APA

Gan, H. M., Falk, S., Morales, H. E., Austin, C. M., Sunnucks, P., & Pavlova, A. (2019). Genomic evidence of neo-sex chromosomes in the eastern yellow robin. GigaScience, 8(9). https://doi.org/10.1093/gigascience/giz111

Vancouver

Gan HM, Falk S, Morales HE, Austin CM, Sunnucks P, Pavlova A. Genomic evidence of neo-sex chromosomes in the eastern yellow robin. GigaScience. 2019 Sep 1;8(9). https://doi.org/10.1093/gigascience/giz111

Author

Gan, Han Ming ; Falk, Stephanie ; Morales, Hernán E ; Austin, Christopher M ; Sunnucks, Paul ; Pavlova, Alexandra. / Genomic evidence of neo-sex chromosomes in the eastern yellow robin. In: GigaScience. 2019 ; Vol. 8, No. 9.

Bibtex

@article{4b7b6ad9f4f14c1294656109988bbab7,
title = "Genomic evidence of neo-sex chromosomes in the eastern yellow robin",
abstract = "Background: Understanding sex-biased natural selection can be enhanced by access to well-annotated chromosomes including ones inherited in sex-specific fashion. The eastern yellow robin (EYR) is an endemic Australian songbird inferred to have experienced climate-driven sex-biased selection and is a prominent model for studying mitochondrial-nuclear interactions in the wild. However, the lack of an EYR reference genome containing both sex chromosomes (in birds, a female bearing Z and W chromosomes) limits efforts to understand the mechanisms of these processes. Here, we assemble the genome for a female EYR and use low-depth (10×) genome resequencing data from 19 individuals of known sex to identify chromosome fragments with sex-specific inheritance. Findings: MaSuRCA hybrid assembly using Nanopore and Illumina reads generated a 1.22-Gb EYR genome in 20,702 scaffolds (94.2% BUSCO completeness). Scaffolds were tested for W-linked (female-only) inheritance using a k-mer approach, and for Z-linked inheritance using median read-depth test in male and female reads (read-depths must indicate haploid female and diploid male representation). This resulted in 2,372 W-linked scaffolds (total length: 97,872,282 bp, N50: 81,931 bp) and 586 Z-linked scaffolds (total length: 121,817,358 bp, N50: 551,641 bp). Anchoring of the sex-linked EYR scaffolds to the reference genome of a female zebra finch revealed 2 categories of sex-linked genomic regions. First, 653 W-linked scaffolds (25.7 Mb) were anchored to the W sex chromosome and 215 Z-linked scaffolds (74.4 Mb) to the Z. Second, 1,138 W-linked scaffolds (70.9 Mb) and 179 Z-linked scaffolds (51.0 Mb) were anchored to a large section (coordinates ∼5 to ∼60 Mb) of zebra finch chromosome 1A. The first ∼5 Mb and last ∼14 Mb of the reference chromosome 1A had only autosomally behaving EYR scaffolds mapping to them. Conclusions: We report a female (W chromosome–containing) EYR genome and provide genomic evidence for a neo-sex (neo-W and neo-Z) chromosome system in the EYR, involving most of a large chromosome (1A) previously only reported to be autosomal in passerines.",
author = "Gan, {Han Ming} and Stephanie Falk and Morales, {Hern{\'a}n E} and Austin, {Christopher M} and Paul Sunnucks and Alexandra Pavlova",
year = "2019",
month = sep,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1093/gigascience/giz111",
language = "Udefineret/Ukendt",
volume = "8",
journal = "GigaScience",
issn = "2047-217X",
publisher = "Oxford Academic",
number = "9",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Genomic evidence of neo-sex chromosomes in the eastern yellow robin

AU - Gan, Han Ming

AU - Falk, Stephanie

AU - Morales, Hernán E

AU - Austin, Christopher M

AU - Sunnucks, Paul

AU - Pavlova, Alexandra

PY - 2019/9/1

Y1 - 2019/9/1

N2 - Background: Understanding sex-biased natural selection can be enhanced by access to well-annotated chromosomes including ones inherited in sex-specific fashion. The eastern yellow robin (EYR) is an endemic Australian songbird inferred to have experienced climate-driven sex-biased selection and is a prominent model for studying mitochondrial-nuclear interactions in the wild. However, the lack of an EYR reference genome containing both sex chromosomes (in birds, a female bearing Z and W chromosomes) limits efforts to understand the mechanisms of these processes. Here, we assemble the genome for a female EYR and use low-depth (10×) genome resequencing data from 19 individuals of known sex to identify chromosome fragments with sex-specific inheritance. Findings: MaSuRCA hybrid assembly using Nanopore and Illumina reads generated a 1.22-Gb EYR genome in 20,702 scaffolds (94.2% BUSCO completeness). Scaffolds were tested for W-linked (female-only) inheritance using a k-mer approach, and for Z-linked inheritance using median read-depth test in male and female reads (read-depths must indicate haploid female and diploid male representation). This resulted in 2,372 W-linked scaffolds (total length: 97,872,282 bp, N50: 81,931 bp) and 586 Z-linked scaffolds (total length: 121,817,358 bp, N50: 551,641 bp). Anchoring of the sex-linked EYR scaffolds to the reference genome of a female zebra finch revealed 2 categories of sex-linked genomic regions. First, 653 W-linked scaffolds (25.7 Mb) were anchored to the W sex chromosome and 215 Z-linked scaffolds (74.4 Mb) to the Z. Second, 1,138 W-linked scaffolds (70.9 Mb) and 179 Z-linked scaffolds (51.0 Mb) were anchored to a large section (coordinates ∼5 to ∼60 Mb) of zebra finch chromosome 1A. The first ∼5 Mb and last ∼14 Mb of the reference chromosome 1A had only autosomally behaving EYR scaffolds mapping to them. Conclusions: We report a female (W chromosome–containing) EYR genome and provide genomic evidence for a neo-sex (neo-W and neo-Z) chromosome system in the EYR, involving most of a large chromosome (1A) previously only reported to be autosomal in passerines.

AB - Background: Understanding sex-biased natural selection can be enhanced by access to well-annotated chromosomes including ones inherited in sex-specific fashion. The eastern yellow robin (EYR) is an endemic Australian songbird inferred to have experienced climate-driven sex-biased selection and is a prominent model for studying mitochondrial-nuclear interactions in the wild. However, the lack of an EYR reference genome containing both sex chromosomes (in birds, a female bearing Z and W chromosomes) limits efforts to understand the mechanisms of these processes. Here, we assemble the genome for a female EYR and use low-depth (10×) genome resequencing data from 19 individuals of known sex to identify chromosome fragments with sex-specific inheritance. Findings: MaSuRCA hybrid assembly using Nanopore and Illumina reads generated a 1.22-Gb EYR genome in 20,702 scaffolds (94.2% BUSCO completeness). Scaffolds were tested for W-linked (female-only) inheritance using a k-mer approach, and for Z-linked inheritance using median read-depth test in male and female reads (read-depths must indicate haploid female and diploid male representation). This resulted in 2,372 W-linked scaffolds (total length: 97,872,282 bp, N50: 81,931 bp) and 586 Z-linked scaffolds (total length: 121,817,358 bp, N50: 551,641 bp). Anchoring of the sex-linked EYR scaffolds to the reference genome of a female zebra finch revealed 2 categories of sex-linked genomic regions. First, 653 W-linked scaffolds (25.7 Mb) were anchored to the W sex chromosome and 215 Z-linked scaffolds (74.4 Mb) to the Z. Second, 1,138 W-linked scaffolds (70.9 Mb) and 179 Z-linked scaffolds (51.0 Mb) were anchored to a large section (coordinates ∼5 to ∼60 Mb) of zebra finch chromosome 1A. The first ∼5 Mb and last ∼14 Mb of the reference chromosome 1A had only autosomally behaving EYR scaffolds mapping to them. Conclusions: We report a female (W chromosome–containing) EYR genome and provide genomic evidence for a neo-sex (neo-W and neo-Z) chromosome system in the EYR, involving most of a large chromosome (1A) previously only reported to be autosomal in passerines.

U2 - 10.1093/gigascience/giz111

DO - 10.1093/gigascience/giz111

M3 - Tidsskriftartikel

C2 - 31494668

VL - 8

JO - GigaScience

JF - GigaScience

SN - 2047-217X

IS - 9

ER -

ID: 246093978