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College of Life Sciences, Peking University
Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology, CAS
State Key Laboratory
of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany, CAS
Sponsors

Peking University
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The 111 Project

National Natural Science Foundation of China
Higher Education Press
Asymmetry in the strength of sexual antagonism in XY vs. ZW systems
– Evidence from whole-genome expression
Beijing Institute of Genomics, CAS, China
Abstract
Sexual antagonism refers to selective pressure that operates on the two sexes differently, especially when a mutation is beneficial in one sex but deleterious in the other. Sexual antagonism has interesting consequences in species with chromosomal sex-determination. Prior studies have established that gene expression on the X chromosome tends to be female-biased. For the same reason, the opposite for the Z chromosome may also be true. Was the force driving the bias mainly sexual selection or does natural selection play a key role? Is the strength of sexual antagonism the same in the XY vs ZW systems? If sexual selection is the main driving force, one may expect male-bias on Z to be stronger than female bias on X in species where sexual selection on males is stronger than on females. The asymmetry should be testable and observable in both ZZ/ZW and XX/XY system. In this study, we analyze sex-biased expression profiles for somatic tissues and gonad in Drosophila melanogaster, mice, and chicken embryo and adults. We observe that X chromosome is sex-biased in Drosophila and mammals, but mostly gonad-based. In somatic tissue, the level of sex-bias in chicken with homogametic males is dramatically different from that in fly and mammal, the system with heterogametic males. The level of sex bias is weak overall in somatic tissue of mouse and Drosophila. In birds, the expression level of Z-linked genes in soma is shifted significantly to be male-biased relative to autosome. Our result suggests that sexual antagonism is asymmetric in males than in females.
Xuemei Lu
Beijing Institute of Genomics, CAS, China
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