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Article : Sequencing the mouse Y chromosome reveals convergent gene acquisition and amplification on both sex chromosomes.
  • 2
  • Auteurs
    Y.Q. Shirleen Soh, Jessica Alföldi, Tatyana Pyntikova, Laura G. Brown, Tina Graves, Patrick J. Minx, Robert S. Fulton, Colin Kremitzki, Natalia Koutseva, Jacob L. Mueller, Steve Rozen, Jennifer F. Hughes, Elane Owens, James E. Womack, William J. Murphy, Qing Cao, Pieter de Jong, Wesley C. Warren, Richard K. Wilson, Helen Skaletsky, and David C. Page
  • Année de publication
    2014
  • Journal
    Cell
  • Abstract (dans sa langue originale)

    We sequenced the MSY (Male-Specific region of the Y chromosome) of the C57BL/6J strain of the laboratory mouse Mus musculus. In contrast to theories that Y chromosomes are heterochromatic and gene poor, the mouse MSY is 99.9% euchromatic and contains about 700 protein-coding genes. Only two percent of the MSY derives from the ancestral autosomes that gave rise to the mammalian sex chromosomes. Instead, all but 50 of the MSY's genes belong to three acquired, massively amplified gene families that have no homologs on primate MSYs, but do have acquired, amplified homologs on the mouse X chromosome. The complete mouse MSY sequence brings to light dramatic forces in sex chromosome evolution: lineage-specific convergent acquisition and amplification of X-Y gene families, possibly fueled by antagonism between acquired X-Y homologs. The mouse MSY sequence presents opportunities for experimental studies of a sex-specific chromosome in its entirety, in a genetically tractable model organism.

  • Identifiant unique
    10.1016/j.cell.2014.09.052
  • Accès libre
    Accéder à la référence
  • Apparait dans la controverse
    Le chromosome Y va-t-il disparaître ?
  • Comment les contributeurs jugent la qualité scientifique de cette référence :

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  • Le chromosome Y va-t-il disparaître ? Disparition ou Pas de disparition
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