Journal of Biology (Mar 2007)

Dosage compensation is less effective in birds than in mammals

  • Itoh Yuichiro,
  • Melamed Esther,
  • Yang Xia,
  • Kampf Kathy,
  • Wang Susanna,
  • Yehya Nadir,
  • Van Nas Atila,
  • Replogle Kirstin,
  • Band Mark R,
  • Clayton David F,
  • Schadt Eric E,
  • Lusis Aldons J,
  • Arnold Arthur P

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/jbiol53
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
p. 2

Abstract

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Abstract Background In animals with heteromorphic sex chromosomes, dosage compensation of sex-chromosome genes is thought to be critical for species survival. Diverse molecular mechanisms have evolved to effectively balance the expressed dose of X-linked genes between XX and XY animals, and to balance expression of X and autosomal genes. Dosage compensation is not understood in birds, in which females (ZW) and males (ZZ) differ in the number of Z chromosomes. Results Using microarray analysis, we compared the male:female ratio of expression of sets of Z-linked and autosomal genes in two bird species, zebra finch and chicken, and in two mammalian species, mouse and human. Male:female ratios of expression were significantly higher for Z genes than for autosomal genes in several finch and chicken tissues. In contrast, in mouse and human the male:female ratio of expression of X-linked genes is quite similar to that of autosomal genes, indicating effective dosage compensation even in humans, in which a significant percentage of genes escape X-inactivation. Conclusion Birds represent an unprecedented case in which genes on one sex chromosome are expressed on average at constitutively higher levels in one sex compared with the other. Sex-chromosome dosage compensation is surprisingly ineffective in birds, suggesting that some genomes can do without effective sex-specific sex-chromosome dosage compensation mechanisms.