Geckos are an excellent group to study the evolution of sex determination, as they possess a remarkable variability ranging from a complete absence of sex chromosomes to highly differentiated sex chromosomes. We explored sex determination in the Madagascar leaf-tail geckos of the genus . The cytogenetic analyses revealed highly heterochromatic W chromosomes in all three examined species (, , ). The comparative gene coverage analysis between sexes in uncovered an extensive Z-specific region, with a gene content shared with the chicken chromosomes 8, 20, 26 and 28. The genomic region homologous to chicken chromosome 28 has been independently co-opted for the role of sex chromosomes in several vertebrate lineages, including monitors, beaded lizards and monotremes, perhaps because it contains the gene, whose homologs were repeatedly recruited as a sex-determining locus. We demonstrate that all tested species of leaf-tail geckos share homologous sex chromosomes despite the differences in shape and size of their W chromosomes, which are not homologous to the sex chromosomes of other closely related genera. The rather old (at least 40 million years), highly differentiated sex chromosomes of geckos can serve as a great system to study the convergence of sex chromosomes evolved from the same genomic region.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9856856 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells12020260 | DOI Listing |
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