Origins of New Male Germ-line Functions from X-Derived Autosomal Retrogenes in the Mouse
Resource
Molecular Biology and Evolution 24 (10): 2242-2253
Journal
Molecular Biology and Evolution
Journal Volume
24
Journal Issue
10
Pages
2242-2253
Date Issued
2007
Date
2007
Author(s)
Shiao, Meng-Shin
Khil, Pavel
Camerini-Otero, R. Daniel
Shiroishi, Toshihiko
Moriwaki, Kazuo
Long, Manyuan
Abstract
Recent literature demonstrates that retrogenes tend to leave the X chromosome and integrate onto the autosomes and evolve male-biased expression patterns. Several selection-based evolutionary mechanisms have been proposed to explain this observation. Testing these selection-based models requires examining the evolutionary history and functional properties of new retrogenes, particularly those that show evidence of directional movement between the X and the autosomes (X-related retrogenes). This includes autosomal retrogenes with parental paralogs on the X chromosome (X-derived autosomal retrogenes) and those retrogenes integrated onto the X chromosomes (X-linked retrogenes). In order to understand why retrogenes tend to move nonrandomly in genomes, we examined the expression patterns and evolutionary mechanisms concerning gene pairs having young retrogenes - originating less than 20 MYA (after mouse-rat split). We demonstrate that these X-derived autosomal retrogenes evolved a more restricted male-biased expression pattern: they are expressed exclusively or predominantly in the testis, in particular, during the late stages of spermatogenesis. In contrast, the parental counterparts have relatively broad expression patterns in various tissues and spermatogenetic stages. We further observed that positive selection is targeting these X-derived autosomal retrogenes with novel male-biased expression patterns. This suggests that such retrogenes evolved new male germ-line functions that may be complementary to the functions of the parental paralogs, which themselves contribute little during spermatogenesis. Such evolutionary changes may be beneficial to the populations. Furthermore, most identified X-related retrogenes have recruited novel adjacent sequences as their untranslated regions (UTRs), suggesting that these UTRs, acquired de novo, may play an important role in establishing new regulatory mechanisms to carry out the new male germ-line functions. © The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution. All rights reserved.
Subjects
Male functions; Mouse; Retroposition; Spermatogenesis
Other Subjects
3' untranslated region; 5' untranslated region; article; autosomal inheritance; developmental stage; evolutionary rate; gene duplication; genetic selection; genome analysis; germ line; molecular evolution; paralogy; reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction; spermatogenesis; X chromosome; Animals; Base Sequence; Evolution, Molecular; Gene Expression; Germ Cells; Haplotypes; Male; Mice; Polymorphism, Genetic; Rats; Retroelements; Sequence Analysis, DNA; X Chromosome; Rattus
Type
journal article
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