Research Data for 'Causes and consequences of sex-chromosome turnovers in Diptera'

DOI

Sex-chromosome systems are highly variable across animals, but how they transition from one to another is not well understood. Diptera have undergone multiple sex-chromosome turnovers and expansions while maintaining their general chromosomal content, which makes them an ideal clade to study such transitions. We analysed more than 100 dipteran whole-genome assemblies and identified 4 new lineages that underwent sex-chromosome turnover (in addition to the 5 previously reported). We find the majority of turnovers happened in the group Schizophora, which tend to have fewer genes on the F element (the chromosome homologous to the ancestral insect X chromosome) than lower dipterans, a factor previously hypothesized to facilitate turnover. Most derived X chromosomes have higher GC content than autosomes, consistent with a high prevalence of male-achiasmy in Diptera. In addition, an excess of gene movement out of the X is detected for most of these new X chromosomes, and many of these moved genes have high testis expression in Drosophila, suggesting that out-of-X gene movement contributes to the long-term demasculinization of X chromosomes.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.15479/AT-ISTA-20833
Metadata Access https://research-explorer.app.ist.ac.at/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_dc&identifier=oai:pub.research-explorer.ista.ac.at:20833
Provenance
Creator Layana Franco, Lorena Alexandra ; ORCID logo; Toups, Melissa A ; ORCID logo; Vicoso, Beatriz ; ORCID logo
Publisher Institute of Science and Technology Austria
Publication Year 2026
Rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
OpenAccess true
Contact repository.manager(at)ist.ac.at
Representation
Resource Type info:eu-repo/semantics/other; doc-type:ResearchData; Text
Discipline Life Sciences, Natural Sciences, Engineering Sciences