Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://223.31.159.10:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/426
Title: Genetics of dioecy and causal sex chromosomes in plants
Authors: Kumar, Sushil
Kumari, Renu
Sharma, Vishakha
Keywords: dioecy-mediated species evolution
plant unisexuality
sex-chromosome evolution
sex-ratio variation
XY–WZ transition
Y-chromosome degeneration
Issue Date: 2014
Publisher: Indian Academy of Sciences
Citation: J. Genet., 93(1): 241-277
Abstract: Dioecy (separate male and female individuals) ensures outcrossing and is more prevalent in animals than in plants. Although it is common in bryophytes and gymnosperms, only 5% of angiosperms are dioecious. In dioecious higher plants, flowers borne on male and female individuals are, respectively deficient in functional gynoecium and androecium. Dioecy is inherited via three sex chromosome systems: XX/XY, XX/X0 and WZ/ZZ, such that XX or WZ is female and XY, X0 or ZZ are males. The XX/XY system generates the rarer XX/X0 and WZ/ZZ systems. An autosome pair begets XY chromosomes. A recessive loss-of-androecium mutation (ana) creates X chromosome and a dominant gynoecium-suppressing (GYS) mutation creates Y chromosome. The ana/ANA and gys/GYS loci are in the sex-determining region (SDR) of the XY pair. Accumulation of inversions, deleterious mutations and repeat elements, especially transposons, in the SDR of Y suppresses recombination between X and Y in SDR, making Y labile and increasingly degenerate and heteromorphic from X. Continued recombination between X and Y in their pseudoautosomal region located at the ends of chromosomal arms allows survival of the degenerated Y and of the species. Dioecy is presumably a component of the evolutionary cycle for the origin of new species. Inbred hermaphrodite species assume dioecy. Later they suffer degenerate-Y-led population regression. Cross-hybridization between such extinguishing species and heterologous species, followed by genome duplication of segregants from hybrids, give rise to new species.
Description: Accepted date: 5 September 2013
URI: http://172.16.0.77:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/426
ISSN: 0022-1333
Appears in Collections:Institutional Publications

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