Labile sex chromosomes and a novel candidate sex-determination gene in
the Australian freshwater fish family Percichthyidae
Abstract
Sex-specific ecology has management implications, but rapid
sex-chromosome turnover in fishes hinders development of markers to sex
monomorphic species. Here, we use annotated genomes and
reduced-representation sequencing data for two Australian percichthyids,
the Macquarie perch Macquaria australasica and the golden perch M.
ambigua, and whole genome resequencing data for 50 Macquarie perch of
each sex, to detect sex-linked loci, identify a candidate
sex-determining gene and develop an affordable sexing assay. In-silico
pool-seq tests of 1,492,004 Macquarie perch SNP loci revealed that a
275-Kb scaffold, containing the transcription factor SOX1b gene, was
enriched for gametologous loci. Within this scaffold, 22 loci were
sex-linked in a predominantly XY system, with females being homozygous
at all 22, and males being heterozygous at two or more. Seven
XY-gametologous loci were within a 146-bp region. Being
~38 Kb upstream of SOX1b, it might act as an enhancer
controlling SOX1b transcription in the bipotential gonad that drives
gonad differentiation. A PCR-RFLP sexing assay, targeting one of the
Y-linked SNPs, tested in 66 known-sex Macquarie perch and two
individuals of each sex of three confamilial species, and amplicon
sequencing of 400 bp encompassing the 146-bp region, revealed that the
few sex-linked positions differ between species and between Macquarie
perch populations. This indicates sex-chromosome lability in
Percichthyidae, also supported by non-homologous scaffolds containing
sex-linked loci for Macquarie- and golden perches. The resources
developed here will facilitate genomic research in Percichthyidae.
Sex-linked markers will be useful for determining genetic sex in some
populations and studying sex chromosome turnover.