Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Publication

A gene deriving from the ancestral sex chromosomes was lost from the X and retained on the Y chromosome in eutherian mammals

Hughes, J.F.
Skaletsky, H.
Drake, A.
Pyntikova, T.
Cho, T-J.
Bellott, D.W.
Page, D.C.
Publication Date
2022-06
End of Embargo
Supervisor
Rights
© The Author(s) 2022. Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons CC-BY license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0)
Peer-Reviewed
Yes
Open Access status
openAccess
Accepted for publication
2022-04-25
Institution
Department
Awarded
Embargo end date
Additional title
Abstract
The mammalian X and Y chromosomes originated from a pair of ordinary autosomes. Over the past ~180 million years, the X and Y have become highly differentiated and now only recombine with each other within a short pseudoautosomal region. While the X chromosome broadly preserved its gene content, the Y chromosome lost ~92% of the genes it once shared with the X chromosome. PRSSLY is a Y-linked gene identified in only a few mammalian species that was thought to be acquired, not ancestral. However, PRSSLY's presence in widely divergent species-bull and mouse-led us to further investigate its evolutionary history. We discovered that PRSSLY is broadly conserved across eutherians and has ancient origins. PRSSLY homologs are found in syntenic regions on the X chromosome in marsupials and on autosomes in more distant animals, including lizards, indicating that PRSSLY was present on the ancestral autosomes but was lost from the X and retained on the Y in eutherian mammals. We found that across eutheria, PRSSLY's expression is testis-specific, and, in mouse, it is most robustly expressed in post-meiotic germ cells. The closest paralog to PRSSLY is the autosomal gene PRSS55, which is expressed exclusively in testes, involved in sperm differentiation and migration, and essential for male fertility in mice. Outside of eutheria, in species where PRSSLY orthologs are not Y-linked, we find expression in a broader range of somatic tissues, suggesting that PRSSLY has adopted a germ-cell-specific function in eutherians. Finally, we generated Prssly mutant mice and found that they are fully fertile but produce offspring with a modest female-biased sex ratio compared to controls. PRSSLY appears to be the first example of a gene that derives from the mammalian ancestral sex chromosomes that was lost from the X and retained on the Y. Although the function of PRSSLY remains to be determined, it may influence the sex ratio by promoting the survival or propagation of Y-bearing sperm.
Version
Published version
Citation
Hughes JF, Skaletsky H, Nicholls PK et al (2022) A gene deriving from the ancestral sex chromosomes was lost from the X and retained on the Y chromosome in eutherian mammals. BMC Biology. 20: 133.
Link to publisher’s version
Link to published version
Type
Article
Qualification name
Notes