TY - JOUR T1 - Recent Y chromosome divergence despite ancient origin of dioecy in poplars (<em>Populus</em>) JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/011817 SP - 011817 AU - Armando Geraldes AU - Charles A. Hefer AU - Arnaud Capron AU - Natalia Kolosova AU - Felix Martinez-Nuñez AU - Raju Y. Soolanayakanahally AU - Brian Stanton AU - Robert D. Guy AU - Shawn D. Mansfield AU - Carl J. Douglas AU - Quentin C. B. Cronk Y1 - 2014/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2014/11/26/011817.abstract N2 - All species of the genus Populus (poplar, aspen) are dioecious, suggesting an ancient origin of this trait. Theory suggests that non-recombining sex-linked regions should quickly spread, eventually becoming heteromorphic chromosomes. In contrast, we show using whole genome scans that the sex-associated region in P. trichocarpa is small and much younger than the age of the genus. This indicates that sex-determination is highly labile in poplar, consistent with recent evidence of “turnover” of sex determination regions in animals. We performed whole genome resequencing of 52 Populus trichocarpa (black cottonwood) and 34 P. balsamifera (balsam poplar) individuals of known sex. Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) in these unstructured populations identified 650 SNPs significantly associated with sex. We estimate the size of the sex-linked region to be ~100 Kbp. All significant SNPs were in strong linkage disequilibrium despite the fact that they were mapped to six different chromosomes (plus 3 unmapped scaffolds) in version 2.2 of the reference genome. We show that this is likely due to genome misassembly. The segregation pattern of sex associated SNPs revealed this to be an XY sex determining system. Estimated divergence times of X and Y haplotype sequences (6-7 MYA) are much more recent than the divergence of P. trichocarpa (poplar) and P. tremuloides (aspen). Consistent with this, in P. tremuloides we found no XY haplotype divergence within the P. trichocarpa sex-determining region. These two species therefore have a different genomic architecture of sex, suggestive of at least one turnover event in the recent past. ER -