The rise and fall of the ancient northern pike master sex determining gene


Sexual reproduction is a ubiquitous basic feature of life and genetic sex determination is thus widespread, at least among eukaryotes. Understanding the remarkable diversity of sex determination mechanisms, however, is limited by the paucity of empirical studies. Here, we traced back the evolution of sex determination in an entire clade of vertebrates and uncovered that the northern pike (Esox lucius) master sex-determining gene initiated from a 65 to 90 million-year-old gene duplication and remained sex-linked on undifferentiated sex chromosomes for at least 56 million years.

Contrasting with its ancient origin, we identified several independent species- or population-specific transitions of sex determination mechanisms in this lineage, including an unexpected complete and recent Y-chromosome loss in some North American northern pike populations. These findings highlight the diversity of the evolutionary fates of master sex-determining genes and raise the importance of careful considerations of population demographic history in sex determination studies.

Our study also puts forward the hypothesis that occasional sex reversals and genetic bottlenecks provide a non-adaptive explanation for sex determination transitions.

Authors: Qiaowei Pan, Romain Feron, Elodie Jouanno, Hugo Darras, Amaury Herpin, Ben Koop, Eric Rondeau, Frederick W. Goetz, Wesley A. Larson, Louis Bernatchez, Mike Tringali, Stephen S. Curran, Eric Saillant, Gael P.J. Denys, Frank A. von Hippel, Songlin Chen, J. Andrés López, Hugo Verreycken, Konrad Ocalewicz, Rene Guyomard, Camille Eche, Jerome Lluch, Celine Roques, Hongxia Hu, Roger Tabor, Patrick DeHaan, Krista M. Nichols, Laurent Journot, Hugues Parrinello, Christophe Klopp, Elena A. Interesova, Vladimir Trifonov, Manfred Schartl, John Postlethwait, Yann Guiguen