Using Sex-Linked Markers via Genotyping-by-Sequencing to Identify XX/XY Sex Chromosomes in the Spiny Frog ( Quasipaa boulengeri ).
Xusheng YangWei LuoYun XiaXiaomao ZengPublished in: Genes (2022)
We used genotyping-by-sequencing (GBS) to identify sex-linked markers in 43 wild-collected spiny frog ( Quasipaa boulengeri ) adults from a single site. We identified a total of 1049 putatively sex-linked GBS-tags, 98% of which indicated an XX/XY system, and finally confirmed 574 XY-type sex-linked loci. The sex specificity of five markers was further validated by PCR amplification using a large number of additional individuals from 26 populations of this species. A total of 27 sex linkage markers matched with the Dmrt1 gene, showing a conserved role in sex determination and differentiation in different organisms from flies and nematodes to mammals. Chromosome 1, which harbors Dmrt1 , was considered as the most likely candidate sex chromosome in anurans. Five sex-linked SNP makers indicated sex reversals, which are sparsely present in wild amphibian populations, in three out of the one-hundred and thirty-three explored individuals. The variety of sex-linked markers identified could be used in population genetics analyses requiring information on individual sex or in investigations aimed at drawing inferences about sex determination and sex chromosome evolution.