Clare E. Holleley
University of Canberra
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Featured researches published by Clare E. Holleley.
Nature | 2015
Clare E. Holleley; Denis O'Meally; Stephen D. Sarre; Jennifer A. Marshall Graves; Tariq Ezaz; Kazumi Matsubara; Bhumika Azad; Xiuwen Zhang; Arthur Georges
Sex determination in animals is amazingly plastic. Vertebrates display contrasting strategies ranging from complete genetic control of sex (genotypic sex determination) to environmentally determined sex (for example, temperature-dependent sex determination). Phylogenetic analyses suggest frequent evolutionary transitions between genotypic and temperature-dependent sex determination in environmentally sensitive lineages, including reptiles. These transitions are thought to involve a genotypic system becoming sensitive to temperature, with sex determined by gene–environment interactions. Most mechanistic models of transitions invoke a role for sex reversal. Sex reversal has not yet been demonstrated in nature for any amniote, although it occurs in fish and rarely in amphibians. Here we make the first report of reptile sex reversal in the wild, in the Australian bearded dragon (Pogona vitticeps), and use sex-reversed animals to experimentally induce a rapid transition from genotypic to temperature-dependent sex determination. Controlled mating of normal males to sex-reversed females produces viable and fertile offspring whose phenotypic sex is determined solely by temperature (temperature-dependent sex determination). The W sex chromosome is eliminated from this lineage in the first generation. The instantaneous creation of a lineage of ZZ temperature-sensitive animals reveals a novel, climate-induced pathway for the rapid transition between genetic and temperature-dependent sex determination, and adds to concern about adaptation to rapid global climate change.
Science Advances | 2017
Ira W. Deveson; Clare E. Holleley; James Blackburn; Jennifer A. Marshall Graves; John S. Mattick; Paul D. Waters; Arthur Georges
Alternative splicing in chromatin-modifying genes is associated with temperature-dependent sex in divergent reptile lineages. In many vertebrates, sex of offspring is determined by external environmental cues rather than by sex chromosomes. In reptiles, for instance, temperature-dependent sex determination (TSD) is common. Despite decades of work, the mechanism by which temperature is converted into a sex-determining signal remains mysterious. This is partly because it is difficult to distinguish the primary molecular events of TSD from the confounding downstream signatures of sexual differentiation. We use the Australian central bearded dragon, in which chromosomal sex determination is overridden at high temperatures to produce sex-reversed female offspring, as a unique model to identify TSD-specific features of the transcriptome. We show that an intron is retained in mature transcripts from each of two Jumonji family genes, JARID2 and JMJD3, in female dragons that have been sex-reversed by temperature but not in normal chromosomal females or males. JARID2 is a component of the master chromatin modifier Polycomb Repressive Complex 2, and the mammalian sex-determining factor SRY is directly regulated by an independent but closely related Jumonji family member. We propose that the perturbation of JARID2/JMJD3 function by intron retention alters the epigenetic landscape to override chromosomal sex-determining cues, triggering sex reversal at extreme temperatures. Sex reversal may then facilitate a transition from genetic sex determination to TSD, with JARID2/JMJD3 intron retention preserved as the decisive regulatory signal. Significantly, we also observe sex-associated differential retention of the equivalent introns in JARID2/JMJD3 transcripts expressed in embryonic gonads from TSD alligators and turtles, indicative of a reptile-wide mechanism controlling TSD.
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences | 2016
Hong Li; Clare E. Holleley; Melanie J. Elphick; Arthur Georges; Richard Shine
Sex differences in morphology, physiology, and behaviour are caused by sex-linked genes, as well as by circulating sex-steroid levels. Thus, a shift from genotypic to environmental sex determination may create an organism that exhibits a mixture of male-like and female-like traits. We studied a lizard species (Central Bearded Dragon, Pogona vitticeps), in which the high-temperature incubation of eggs transforms genetically male individuals into functional females. Although they are reproductively female, sex-reversed dragons (individuals with ZZ genotype reversed to female phenotype) resemble genetic males rather than females in morphology (relative tail length), general behaviour (boldness and activity level), and thermoregulatory tactics. Indeed, sex-reversed ‘females’ are more male-like in some behavioural traits than are genetic males. This novel phenotype may impose strong selection on the frequency of sex reversal within natural populations, facilitating rapid shifts in sex-determining systems. A single period of high incubation temperatures (generating thermally induced sex reversal) can produce functionally female individuals with male-like (or novel) traits that enhance individual fitness, allowing the new temperature-dependent sex-determining system to rapidly replace the previous genetically based one.
Sexual Development | 2016
Clare E. Holleley; Stephen D. Sarre; Denis O'Meally; Arthur Georges
Is sex a product of genes, the environment, or both? In this review, we describe the diversity of sex-determining mechanisms in reptiles, with a focus on systems that display gene-environment interactions. We summarise the field and laboratory-based evidence for the occurrence of environmental sex reversal in reptiles and ask whether this is a widespread evolutionary mechanism affecting the evolution of sex chromosomes and speciation in vertebrates. Sex determination systems exist across a continuum of genetic and environmental influences, blurring the lines between what was once considered a strict dichotomy between genetic sex determination and temperature-dependent sex determination. Across this spectrum, we identify the potential for sex reversal in species with clearly differentiated heteromorphic sex chromosomes (Pogona vitticeps, Bassiana duperreyi, Eremias multiocellata, Gekko japonicus), weakly differentiated homomorphic sex chromosomes (Niveoscincus ocellatus), and species with only a weak heritable predisposition for sex (Emys orbicularis, Trachemys scripta). We argue that sex reversal is widespread in reptiles (Testudines, Lacertidae, Agamidae, Scincidae, Gekkonidae) and has the potential to have an impact on individual fitness, resulting in reproductively, morphologically, and behaviourally unique phenotypes. Sex reversal is likely to be a powerful evolutionary force responsible for generating and maintaining lability and diversity in reptile sex-determining modes.
Nature Genetics | 2018
Rebecca N. Johnson; Denis O’Meally; Zhiliang Chen; Graham J. Etherington; Simon Y. W. Ho; Will J. Nash; Catherine E. Grueber; Yuanyuan Cheng; Camilla M. Whittington; Siobhan Dennison; Emma Peel; Wilfried Haerty; Rachel J. O’Neill; Don Colgan; Tonia Russell; David E. Alquezar-Planas; Val Attenbrow; Jason G. Bragg; Parice A. Brandies; Amanda Yoon Yee Chong; Janine E. Deakin; Federica Di Palma; Zachary Duda; Mark D. B. Eldridge; Kyle M. Ewart; Carolyn J. Hogg; Greta J. Frankham; Arthur Georges; Amber Gillett; Merran Govendir
The koala, the only extant species of the marsupial family Phascolarctidae, is classified as ‘vulnerable’ due to habitat loss and widespread disease. We sequenced the koala genome, producing a complete and contiguous marsupial reference genome, including centromeres. We reveal that the koala’s ability to detoxify eucalypt foliage may be due to expansions within a cytochrome P450 gene family, and its ability to smell, taste and moderate ingestion of plant secondary metabolites may be due to expansions in the vomeronasal and taste receptors. We characterized novel lactation proteins that protect young in the pouch and annotated immune genes important for response to chlamydial disease. Historical demography showed a substantial population crash coincident with the decline of Australian megafauna, while contemporary populations had biogeographic boundaries and increased inbreeding in populations affected by historic translocations. We identified genetically diverse populations that require habitat corridors and instituting of translocation programs to aid the koala’s survival in the wild.The assembly of the genome of the koala provides insights into its adaptive biology and identifies gene expansions that contribute to its ability to detoxify eucalyptus-derived compounds and perceive plant secondary metabolites.
Science | 2018
Arthur Georges; Clare E. Holleley
Temperature-responsive epigenetic regulation clarifies a 50-year-old mystery in reptiles Sex determination in reptiles is a complex affair, because incubation temperature and genes interact in many species to regulate sexual development and decide sexual fate, male or female (1–4). A central question that has remained unanswered is, what molecular mechanism allows temperature to so profoundly influence the developmental pathways that determine sex? The means to identify a master sex-determining gene in species with genetic sex determination is well established—identify genes on the sex chromosomes, demonstrate which of these are differentially expressed in male and female embryos early in development, and manipulate their expression to demonstrate reversal of sex (5–7). Not so with identifying the mechanisms of temperature-dependent sex determination (TSD). Temperature could exert its effect on any of the many autosomal genes involved in sexual differentiation, even those peripherally involved, provided their altered expression is capable of reversing sex. Little wonder that, in the 50 years since TSD was discovered in reptiles (8), we have not advanced far in our understanding of the mechanisms of TSD. This is about to change. On page 645 of this issue, Ge et al. (9) report that transcription of the chromatin modifier gene Kdm6b (lysine-specific demethylase 6B) responds to temperature in the red-eared slider turtle Trachemys scripta elegans, and confers temperature sensitivity to a key sex-determining gene, Dmrt1 (doublesex- and mab-3–related transcription factor 1).
Scientific Reports | 2018
Sarah L. Whiteley; Vera Weisbecker; Arthur Georges; Arnault R.G. Gauthier; Darryl L. Whitehead; Clare E. Holleley
Vertebrate sex differentiation follows a conserved suite of developmental events: the bipotential gonads differentiate and shortly thereafter sex specific traits become dimorphic. However, this may not apply to squamates, a diverse vertebrate lineage comprising of many species with thermosensitive sexual development. Of the three species with data on the relative timing of gonad differentiation and genital dimorphism, the females of two (Niveoscincus ocellatus and Barisia imbricata) exhibit a phase of temporary pseudohermaphroditism or TPH (gonads have differentiated well before genital dimorphism). We report a third example of TPH in Pogona vitticeps, an agamid with temperature-induced male to female sex reversal. These findings suggest that for female squamates, genital and gonad development may not be closely synchronised, so that TPH may be common. We further observed a high frequency of ovotestes, a usually rare gonadal phenotype characterised by a mix of male and female structures, exclusively associated with temperature-induced sex reversal. We propose that ovotestes are evidence of a period of antagonism between male and female sex-determining pathways during sex reversal. Female sexual development in squamates is considerably more complex than has been appreciated, providing numerous avenues for future exploration of the genetic and hormonal cues that govern sexual development.
Sexual Development | 2016
Stéphane Flament; Pietro Parma; Frédéric Veyrunes; Andrew T. Major; Craig A. Smith; Eric Pailhoux; Keng Y. Chew; Marilyn B. Renfree; Clare E. Holleley; Stephen D. Sarre; Denis O'Meally; Arthur Georges; Erica V. Todd; Hui Liu; Simon Muncaster; Neil J. Gemmell; Satz Mengensatzproduktion; Druckerei Stückle
Karin Schmid (address as for M. Schmid) E-mail: [email protected] Peter Koopman Professor of Developmental Biology Institute for Molecular Bioscience The University of Queensland AU–Brisbane, Qld. 4072 (Australia) Tel. (+61) 7 3346 2059; Fax. (+61) 7 3346 2101 E-mail [email protected] Manfred Schartl Institute of Physiological Chemistry I University of Würzburg Biozentrum, Am Hubland D–97074 Würzburg (Germany) Tel. (+49) 931 318 4148; Fax (+49) 931 318 4150 E-mail: [email protected]
GigaScience | 2015
Arthur Georges; Qiye Li; Jinmin Lian; Denis O’Meally; Janine E. Deakin; Zongji Wang; Pei Zhang; Matthew K. Fujita; Hardip R. Patel; Clare E. Holleley; Yang Zhou; Xiuwen Zhang; Kazumi Matsubara; Paul D. Waters; Jennifer A. Marshall Graves; Stephen D. Sarre; Guojie Zhang
BMC Genomics | 2013
Tariq Ezaz; Bhumika Azad; Denis O’Meally; Matthew Young; Kazumi Matsubara; Melanie J. Edwards; Xiuwen Zhang; Clare E. Holleley; Janine E. Deakin; Jennifer A. Marshall Graves; Arthur Georges; Scott V. Edwards; Stephen D. Sarre