The sophisticated genetic process of switching
off one X gene is necessary to equalise the dosage of genes
in females (which have two X chromosomes) and males (with
only one). It occurs in all placental mammals including
humans and mice, as well as in marsupials, which diverged
from placentals 180 million years ago.
But Professor Jennifer
Graves, the Head of the Comparative Genomics Group at the
ANU Research School of Biological Sciences (RSBS) and director
of the multi-university ARC Centre for Kangaroo Genomics,
and RSBS PhD student Tim Hore, showed that the XIST gene
is absent from the genomes of marsupials, as well as the
platypus (which diverged even earlier), leading them to
conclude that the gene must have evolved more recently
in placental mammals. This means that XIST probably isn’t
critical to the basic X inactivation mechanism after all.
“We
thought that if XIST really was so critical, we should
have been able to find a copy of this gene in kangaroos.
We’ve been looking since 1995, but found no trace
of it. But this wasn’t absolutely convincing because
we could never be sure that it wasn’t hiding out
somewhere, or had changed so much in evolution we couldn’t
recognise it,” Professor Graves said.
Thorough work
by Mr Hore isolated kangaroo and platypus copies of the
genes that lay close on either side of XIST in the mouse
and human genome. “To my surprise, these genes mapped
far apart on the marsupial X. I sequenced the DNA containing
these flanking genes and found neither contained anything
like the gene XIST. XIST just does not exist in marsupials.” The
research, published recently in the international journal Chromosome
Research, indicates that XIST evolution may
correlate to some of the molecular changes regarded as
slight evolutionary improvements in stabilising the X inactivation
process, according to Professor Graves.
“So marsupials
have done it again. Just like our work of two decades ago
showing that the favoured candidate for sex determination
was the wrong gene, this finding challenges a favoured
hypothesis - in this case a whole field of research – and
shows us how complex control systems are built up out of
simpler elements of evolution.”
|