Laser microdissection-based analysis of the Y sex chromosome of the Antarctic fish Chionodraco hamatus (Notothenioidei, Channichthyidae)
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2015
abstract:
Microdissection, DOP-PCR amplification and microcloning were used to study the large Y chromosome
of Chionodraco hamatus, an Antarctic fish belonging to the Notothenioidei, the dominant component of
the Southern Ocean fauna. The species has evolved a multiple sex chromosome system with digametic
males showing an X1YX2 karyotype and females an X1X1X2X2 karyotype. Fluorescence in situ hybridization,
performed with a painting probe made from microdissected Y chromosomes, allowed a deeper
insight on the chromosomal rearrangement, which underpinned the fusion event that generated the Y.
Then, we used a DNA library established by microdissection and microcloning of the whole Y chromosome
of Ch. hamatus for searching sex-linked sequences. One clone provided preliminary information on
the presence on the Y chromosome of the CHD1 gene homologue, which is sex-linked in birds but in
no other vertebrates. Several clones from the Y-chromosome mini-library contained microsatellites and
transposable elements, one of which mapped to the q arm putative fusion region of the Y chromosome.
The findings confirm that interspersed repetitive sequences might have fostered chromosome rearrangements
and the emergence of the Y chromosome in Ch. hamatus. Detection of the CHD1 gene in the Y
sex-determining region could be a classical example of convergent evolution in action.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Laser microdissection; Y sex chromosome; Antarctic fish; Channichthyidae
List of contributors:
Cocca, Ennio
Published in: