Thursday, October 8, 2020

Does mating explain variation in great ape Y chromosomes?

gorilla

New analysis of the DNA sequence of the male-specific Y chromosomes from all living species of the great ape family helps to clarify how the enigmatic chromosome evolved.

A clearer picture of the evolution of the Y chromosome is important for studying male fertility in humans as well as our understanding of reproduction patterns and the ability to track male lineages in the great apes, which can help with conservation efforts for these endangered species.

A team of biologists and computer scientists at Penn State sequenced and assembled the Y chromosome from orangutan and bonobo and compared those sequences to the existing human, chimpanzee, and gorilla Y sequences. From the comparison, the team were able to clarify patterns of evolution that seem to fit with behavioral differences between the species and reconstruct a model of what the Y chromosome might have looked like in the ancestor of all great apes.

A paper describing the research appears in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Repetition in the Y chromosome

“The Y chromosome is important for male fertility and contains the genes critical for sperm production, but it is often neglected in genomic studies because it is so difficult to sequence and assemble,” says Monika Cechova, a graduate student at Penn State at the time of the research and co-first author of the paper.

“Our hypothesis is that the accelerated change that we see in chimpanzees and bonobos could be related to their mating habits.”

“The Y chromosome contains a lot of repetitive sequences, which are challenging for DNA sequencing, assembling sequences, and aligning sequences for comparison. There aren’t out-of-the-box software packages to deal with the Y chromosome, so we had to overcome these hurdles and optimize our experimental and computational protocols, which allowed us to address interesting biological questions.”

The Y chromosome is unusual. It contains relatively few genes, many of which are involved in male sex determination and sperm production; large sections of repetitive DNA, short sequences repeated over and over again; and large DNA palindromes, inverted repeats that can be many thousands of letters long and read the same forwards and backwards.

Humans, chimps, and gorillas

Previous work by the team comparing human, chimpanzee, and gorilla sequences had revealed some unexpected patterns. Humans are more closely related to chimpanzees, but for some characteristics, the human Y was more similar to the gorilla Y.

“If you just compare the sequence identity—comparing the As,Ts, Cs, and Gs of the chromosomes—humans are more similar to chimpanzees, as you would expect,” says Kateryna Makova, biology professor and a leader of the research team. “But if you look at which genes are present, the types of repetitive sequences, and the shared palindromes, humans look more similar to gorillas. We needed the Y chromosome of more great ape species to tease out the details of what was going on.”

The team, therefore, sequenced the Y chromosome of a bonobo, a close relative of the chimpanzee, and an orangutan, a more distantly related great ape. With these new sequences, the researchers could see that the bonobo and chimpanzee shared the unusual pattern of accelerated rates of DNA sequence change and gene loss, suggesting that this pattern emerged prior to the evolutionary split between the two species.

The orangutan Y chromosome, on the other hand, which serves as an outgroup to ground the comparisons, looked about like what you expect based on its known relationship to the other great apes.

“Our hypothesis is that the accelerated change that we see in chimpanzees and bonobos could be related to their mating habits,” says Rahulsimham Vegesna, a graduate student and co-first author of the paper.

“In chimpanzees and bonobos, one female mates with multiple males during a single cycle. This leads to what we call ‘sperm competition,’ the sperm from several males trying to fertilize a single egg. We think that this situation could provide the evolutionary pressure to accelerate change on the chimpanzee and bonobo Y chromosome, compared to other apes with different mating patterns, but this hypothesis, while consistent with our findings, needs to be evaluated in subsequent studies.”

Great ape ancestor

In addition to teasing out some of the details of how the Y chromosome evolved in individual species, the team used the set of great ape sequences to reconstruct what the Y chromosome might have looked like in the ancestor of modern great apes.

“Having the ancestral great ape Y chromosome helps us to understand how the chromosome evolved,” says Vegesna. “For example, we can see that many of the repetitive regions and palindromes on the Y were already present on the ancestral chromosome. This, in turn, argues for the importance of these features for the Y chromosome in all great apes and allows us to explore how they evolved in each of the separate species.”

The Y chromosome is also unusual because, unlike most chromosomes it doesn’t have a matching partner. We each get two copies of chromosomes 1 through 22, and then some of us (females) get two X chromosomes and some of us (males) get one X and one Y. Partner chromosomes can exchange sections in a process called ‘recombination,’ which is important to preserve the chromosomes evolutionarily. Because the Y doesn’t have a partner, it had been hypothesized that the long palindromic sequences on the Y might be able to recombine with themselves and thus still be able to preserve their genes, but the mechanism was not known.

“We used the data from a technique called Hi-C, which captures the three-dimensional organization of the chromosome, to try to see how this ‘self-recombination’ is facilitated,” says Cechova. “What we found was that regions of the chromosome that recombine with each other are kept in close proximity to one another spatially by the structure of the chromosome.”

“Working on the Y chromosome presents a lot of challenges,” says Paul Medvedev, associate professor of computer science and engineering and of biochemistry and molecular biology and the other leader of the research team. “We had to develop specialized methods and computational analyses to account for the highly repetitive nature of the sequence of the Y.”

Support for the work came from the US National Institutes of Health, the US National Science Foundation, the Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute, the Institute of Computational and Data Sciences, the Huck Institutes of the Life Sciences, and the Eberly College of Science of Penn State and from the CBIOS Predoctoral Training Program awarded to Penn State by the National Institutes of Health.

Source: Penn State

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