Influence of Gonadal and Chromosomal Sex on the Brain Transcriptome in a Mouse Species with Natural Sex Reversal

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Abstract

Sex chromosomes are expected to play a role in shaping the transcriptional architecture of sexual dimorphism, through the direct expression of sex-linked genes, by regulating autosomal genes, or in interactions with hormones. Yet, their degree of involvement remains elusive partly because chromosomal sex (e.g. XX/XY) and gonadal sex (ovaries or testes) are usually inextricably intertwined. They are, however, dissociated in the African pygmy mouse, Mus minutoides, in which a feminizing X (X*) has evolved, resulting in three female genotypes (XX, XX*, and X*Y) and one male genotype (XY). Furthermore, all sex chromosomes are fused to autosomes (neo-sex chromosomes: neo-X, neo-X* and neo-Y). Despite complete sex reversal, X*Y females show distinctive phenotypes with greater fertility, divergent maternal care strategies, and the masculinization of some traits (e.g. enhanced aggressiveness). By comparing the brain transcriptome of the four sexual genotypes, we show that differential gene expression is mainly linked to gonadal sex but also, and significantly, to chromosomal sex. Genes influenced by chromosomal sex are overrepresented on sex-linked genomic regions, and some are strong candidates to explain X*Y-specific behavioral and reproductive traits. Our results also suggest the preferential inactivation of the X* chromosome in XX* females, only in the brain, which could explain their trait similarities with XX females. Overall, we show that sex and neo-sex chromosomes have profoundly impacted the brain transcriptome in ways that reflect their new transmission modes, evolutionary trajectories, and resulting genomic conflicts.

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