@article {Molinier269951, author = {C{\'e}cile Molinier and C{\'e}line M.O. Reisser and Peter Fields and Adeline S{\'e}gard and Yan Galimov and Christoph R. Haag}, title = {Identification of general patterns of sex-biased expression in Daphnia, a genus with environmental sex determination}, elocation-id = {269951}, year = {2018}, doi = {10.1101/269951}, publisher = {Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory}, abstract = {Daphnia reproduce by cyclic-parthenogenesis, where phases of asexual reproduction are intermitted by sexual production of diapause stages. This life cycle, together with environmental sex determination, allow the comparison of gene expression between genetically identical males and females. We investigated gene expression differences between males and females in four genotypes of Daphnia magna and compared the results with published data on sex-biased gene expression in two other Daphnia species, each representing one of the major phylogenetic clades within the genus. We found that 42\% of all annotated genes showed sex-biased expression in D. magna. This proportion is similar both to estimates from other Daphnia species as well as from species with genetic sex determination, suggesting that sex-biased expression is not reduced under environmental sex determination. Among 7453 single copy, one-to-one orthologs in the three Daphnia species, 707 consistently showed sex-biased expression and 675 were biased in the same direction in all three species. Hence these genes represent a core-set of genes with consistent sex-differential expression in the genus. A functional analysis identified that several of them are involved in known sex determination pathways. Moreover, 75\% were overexpressed in females rather than males, a pattern that appears to be a general feature of sex-biased gene expression in Daphnia.Short summary In some species with environmental sex determination, gene expression can be compared between genetically identical males and females. Here, we investigated sex-biased expression in one such species, D. magna, and compared it with data from two congeners. We found that all three species have a common set of 675 genes with consistent differential expression and with a strong bias towards overexpression in females rather than males. Moreover, the proportion of sex-biased genes in each of the three Daphnia species was similar to Drosophila species with genetic sex determination, suggesting that sex-biased expression is not necessarily reduced under environmental sex determination.}, URL = {https://www.biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/02/22/269951}, eprint = {https://www.biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/02/22/269951.full.pdf}, journal = {bioRxiv} }