Four-Hundred Million Years of Conserved Synteny of Human Xp and Xq Genes on Three Tetraodon Chromosomes

  1. Frank Grützner1,
  2. Hugues Roest Crollius2,
  3. Götz Lütjens3,
  4. Olivier Jaillon2,
  5. Jean Weissenbach2,
  6. Hans-Hilger Ropers3, and
  7. Thomas Haaf4,5
  1. 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

  • 5 Corresponding author.

  • E-MAIL Haaf{at}humgen.klinik.uni-mainz.de; FAX 49-6131-175690.

  • Article and publication are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.222402. Article published online before print in August 2002.

    • Received November 5, 2001.
    • Accepted June 12, 2002.

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