TY - JOUR
T1 - A male-essential miRNA is key for avian sex chromosome dosage compensation
AU - Fallahshahroudi, Amir
AU - Yousefi Taemeh, Sara
AU - Rodríguez-Montes, Leticia
AU - Trost, Nils
AU - Frank, Dana
AU - Lafrenz, Pascal
AU - Koubek, Jiri
AU - Tellez, Guillermo
AU - Ballantyne, Maeve
AU - Idoko-Akoh, Alewo
AU - Taylor, Lorna
AU - Sherman, Adrian
AU - Davey, Megan
AU - Ma, Cheng
AU - Sorato, Enrico
AU - Johnsson, Martin
AU - Grozou, Christina
AU - Xue, Ying
AU - Liu, Long
AU - Kramer, Guenter
AU - Rubin, Carl-Johan
AU - Cardoso-Moreira, Margarida
AU - McGrew, Mike J
AU - Kaessmann, Henrik
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2025.
PY - 2025/7/16
Y1 - 2025/7/16
N2 - Birds have a sex chromosome system in which females are heterogametic (ZW) and males are homogametic (ZZ)1. The differentiation of avian sex chromosomes from ancestral autosomes entails the loss of most genes from the W chromosome during evolution1,2. However, the extent to which mechanisms evolved that counterbalance this substantial reduction in female gene dosage remains unclear. Here we report functional in vivo and evolutionary analyses of a Z-linked microRNA (miR-2954) with strong male-biased expression, previously proposed to mediate avian sex chromosome dosage compensation3. We knocked out miR-2954 in chicken, which resulted in early embryonic lethality in homozygous knockout males, probably driven by specific upregulation of dosage-sensitive Z-linked target genes. Evolutionary gene expression analyses further revealed that these dosage-sensitive target genes underwent both transcriptional and translational upregulation on the single Z in female birds. Altogether, this work unveils a scenario in which evolutionary pressures following W gene loss drove transcriptional and translational upregulation of dosage-sensitive Z-linked genes in females but also their transcriptional upregulation in males. The resulting excess of transcripts in males, resulting from the combined activity of two upregulated dosage-sensitive Z gene copies, was in turn offset by the emergence of a highly targeted miR-2954-mediated transcript degradation mechanism during avian evolution. This study uncovered a unique sex chromosome dosage compensation system in birds, in which a microRNA has become essential for male survival.
AB - Birds have a sex chromosome system in which females are heterogametic (ZW) and males are homogametic (ZZ)1. The differentiation of avian sex chromosomes from ancestral autosomes entails the loss of most genes from the W chromosome during evolution1,2. However, the extent to which mechanisms evolved that counterbalance this substantial reduction in female gene dosage remains unclear. Here we report functional in vivo and evolutionary analyses of a Z-linked microRNA (miR-2954) with strong male-biased expression, previously proposed to mediate avian sex chromosome dosage compensation3. We knocked out miR-2954 in chicken, which resulted in early embryonic lethality in homozygous knockout males, probably driven by specific upregulation of dosage-sensitive Z-linked target genes. Evolutionary gene expression analyses further revealed that these dosage-sensitive target genes underwent both transcriptional and translational upregulation on the single Z in female birds. Altogether, this work unveils a scenario in which evolutionary pressures following W gene loss drove transcriptional and translational upregulation of dosage-sensitive Z-linked genes in females but also their transcriptional upregulation in males. The resulting excess of transcripts in males, resulting from the combined activity of two upregulated dosage-sensitive Z gene copies, was in turn offset by the emergence of a highly targeted miR-2954-mediated transcript degradation mechanism during avian evolution. This study uncovered a unique sex chromosome dosage compensation system in birds, in which a microRNA has become essential for male survival.
U2 - 10.1038/s41586-025-09256-9
DO - 10.1038/s41586-025-09256-9
M3 - Article (Academic Journal)
C2 - 40670784
SN - 0028-0836
VL - 645
SP - 148
EP - 157
JO - Nature
JF - Nature
IS - 8079
ER -