Long-term experimental hybridisation results in the evolution of a new sex chromosome in swordtail fish
Fish have a high diversity of sex-determining systems, but the mechanisms responsible for this are not well understood. Here, Franchini et al. show how hybridization and backcrossing have led to the evolution of a new sex chromosome in swordtail fish during 30 years of experimental evolution.
Main Authors: | Paolo Franchini, Julia C. Jones, Peiwen Xiong, Susanne Kneitz, Zachariah Gompert, Wesley C. Warren, Ronald B. Walter, Axel Meyer, Manfred Schartl |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Nature Publishing Group
2018-12-01
|
Series: | Nature Communications |
Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-07648-2 |
Similar Items
-
Comprehensive phylogenetic analysis of all species of swordtails and platies (Pisces: Genus <it>Xiphophorus</it>) uncovers a hybrid origin of a swordtail fish, <it>Xiphophorus monticolus</it>, and demonstrates that the sexually selected sword originated in the ancestral lineage of the genus, but was lost again secondarily
by: Kang Ji Hyoun, et al.
Published: (2013-01-01) -
The Colorful Sex Chromosomes of Teleost Fish
by: Verena A. Kottler, et al.
Published: (2018-05-01) -
Patterns of Sex Chromosome Differentiation in Spiders: Insights from Comparative Genomic Hybridisation
by: Alexandr Sember, et al.
Published: (2020-07-01) -
<it>Fgfr1 </it>signalling in the development of a sexually selected trait in vertebrates, the sword of swordtail fish
by: Meyer Axel, et al.
Published: (2008-10-01) -
The application of in situ hybridisation to the genetic analysis of the X chromosome
by: Buckle, V. J.
Published: (1985)