Okuno Miki, Matsuoka Kentaro, Mochimaru Yuta, Yamabe Takahiro, Okano Mayou, Jogahara Takamichi, Toyoda Atsushi, Kuroiwa Asato, Itoh Takehiko
Division of Microbiology, Department of Infectious Medicine, Kurume University School of Medicine, Kurume, Fukuoka 830-0011, Japan.
School of Life Science and Technology, Institute of Science Tokyo, Tokyo 152-8550, Japan.
Mol Biol Evol. 2025 Apr 30;42(5). doi: 10.1093/molbev/msaf102.
The XX/XY sex chromosome system is highly conserved across mammals, with rare exceptions where males lack a Y chromosome. Among these is the genus Tokudaia, a group of spiny rats comprising three species with unique sex chromosome systems deviating from the typical XX/XY pattern. While Tokudaia osimensis and Tokudaia tokunoshimensis have completely lost the Y chromosome, they retain some Y-linked genes on the X chromosome. In contrast, Tokudaia muenninki retains large sex chromosomes where both the X and Y chromosomes have fused with an autosome pair, carrying multi-copied Y-linked genes, including Sry. In this study, we generated chromosome-level genome assemblies for male individuals of all three Tokudaia species. By investigating loci typically associated with rodent Y-linked genes, we characterized sequences derived from the Tokudaia Y-chromosomal most recent common ancestor (Tokudaia Y-MRCA) and traced their evolutionary trajectories. Our analyses revealed that an initial X-to-Y translocation of a sequence containing the boundary-associated segmental duplication in a common ancestor of Tokudaia marked the beginning of their unique sex chromosome evolution. The boundary-associated segmental duplication, uniquely multi-copied in Tokudaia, facilitated further rearrangements through nonallelic homologous recombination and duplications. These processes culminated in subsequent Y-to-X translocations and duplications, leading to the complete loss of the Y chromosome as a distinct entity while preserving Y-linked genes in a multicopy state on the X chromosome. These findings highlight Tokudaia's rapid sex chromosome evolution within 3 million years and provide insights into the mechanisms underlying Y chromosome loss, contributing to a broader understanding of sex chromosome evolution in rodents.
XX/XY性染色体系统在哺乳动物中高度保守,仅有极少数例外情况,即雄性个体缺少Y染色体。其中包括德之岛属,这是一群刺鼠,包含三个物种,它们具有独特的性染色体系统,偏离了典型的XX/XY模式。虽然冲绳德之岛鼠和德之岛德之岛亚种已经完全失去了Y染色体,但它们在X染色体上保留了一些Y连锁基因。相比之下,冲绳多纪田鼠保留了大型性染色体,其中X和Y染色体都与一对常染色体融合,携带多拷贝的Y连锁基因,包括Sry。在这项研究中,我们为所有三种德之岛属物种的雄性个体生成了染色体水平的基因组组装。通过研究通常与啮齿动物Y连锁基因相关的位点,我们对源自德之岛Y染色体最近共同祖先(德之岛Y-MRCA)的序列进行了表征,并追踪了它们的进化轨迹。我们的分析表明,在德之岛的一个共同祖先中,一个包含边界相关片段重复的序列最初从X染色体易位到Y染色体,标志着它们独特的性染色体进化的开始。边界相关片段重复在德之岛中独特地多拷贝存在,通过非等位基因同源重组和重复促进了进一步的重排。这些过程最终导致随后的Y染色体到X染色体易位和重复,导致Y染色体作为一个独立实体完全消失,同时在X染色体上以多拷贝状态保留Y连锁基因。这些发现突出了德之岛属在300万年内在性染色体上的快速进化,并为Y染色体丢失的潜在机制提供了见解,有助于更广泛地理解啮齿动物的性染色体进化。