Four-Hundred Million Years of Conserved Synteny of Human Xp and Xq Genes on Three Tetraodon Chromosomes
- Frank Grützner1,
- Hugues Roest Crollius2,
- Götz Lütjens3,
- Olivier Jaillon2,
- Jean Weissenbach2,
- Hans-Hilger Ropers3, and
- Thomas Haaf4,5
- 1Comparative Genomics Group, Research School of Biological Sciences, Australian National University, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia; 2Genoscope, CNRS UMR8030, 91057 Evry Cedex, France; 3Max Planck Institute of Molecular Genetics, 14195 Berlin, Germany; 4Institute of Human Genetics, Mainz University School of Medicine, 55101 Mainz, Germany
Abstract
The freshwater pufferfish Tetraodon nigroviridis (TNI) has become highly attractive as a compact reference vertebrate genome for gene finding and validation. We have mapped genes, which are more or less evenly spaced on the human chromosomes 9 and X, onTetraodon chromosomes using fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), to establish syntenic relationships between Tetraodonand other key vertebrate genomes. PufferFISH revealed that the human X is an orthologous mosaic of three Tetraodon chromosomes. More than 350 million years ago, an ancestral vertebrate autosome shared orthologous Xp and Xq genes with Tetraodon chromosomes 1 and 7. The shuffled order of Xp and Xq orthologs on their syntenic Tetraodon chromosomes can be explained by the prevalence of evolutionary inversions. The Tetraodon 2 orthologous genes are clustered in human Xp11 and represent a recent addition to the eutherian X sex chromosome. The human chromosome 9 and the avian Z sex chromosome show a much lower degree of synteny conservation in the pufferfish than the human X chromosome. We propose that a special selection process during vertebrate evolution has shaped a highly conserved array(s) of X-linked genes long before the X was used as a mammalian sex chromosome and many X chromosomal genes were recruited for reproduction and/or the development of cognitive abilities.
[Sequence data reported in this paper have been deposited in GenBank and assigned the following accession no:AJ308098.]
Footnotes
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↵5 Corresponding author.
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E-MAIL Haaf{at}humgen.klinik.uni-mainz.de; FAX 49-6131-175690.
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Article and publication are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.222402. Article published online before print in August 2002.
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- Received November 5, 2001.
- Accepted June 12, 2002.
- Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press











