“…At the same time, the expression of some genes encoded by the varied chromosomes did not change with the gene dosage; in other words, they were compensated (Birchler, 1981; Birchler and Newton, 1981; Guo and Birchler, 1994). In Drosophila , both autosomal and sex chromosome aneuploidies can affect the expression levels of other chromosomes, while the transcription of the varied chromosome is closer to normal diploid levels (Devlin et al, 1982, 1988; Birchler et al, 1990; Sun et al, 2013a,b,c; Zhang S et al, 2021a). Recent whole-genome studies of maize and Arabidopsis aneuploid series have also demonstrated the prevalence of the inverse dosage effect and dosage compensation (Hou et al, 2018; Johnson et al, 2020; Shi et al, 2021; Yang et al, 2021).…”