How Do Genomes Create Novel Phenotypes? Insights from the Loss of the Worker Caste in Ant Social Parasites

被引:35
|
作者
Smith, Chris R. [1 ]
Cahan, Sara Helms [2 ]
Kemena, Carsten [3 ]
Brady, Sean G. [4 ]
Yang, Wei [5 ]
Bornberg-Bauer, Erich [3 ]
Eriksson, Ti [6 ]
Gadau, Juergen [6 ]
Helmkampf, Martin [6 ]
Gotzek, Dietrich [7 ,8 ]
Miyakawa, Misato Okamoto [9 ]
Suarez, Andrew V. [8 ,10 ]
Mikheyev, Alexander [9 ]
机构
[1] Earlham Coll, Dept Biol, Richmond, IN 47374 USA
[2] Univ Vermont, Dept Biol, Burlington, VT 05405 USA
[3] Univ Munster, Inst Evolut & Biodivers, D-48149 Munster, Germany
[4] Natl Museum Nat Hist, Dept Entomol, Smithsonian Inst, Washington, DC 20560 USA
[5] Univ Illinois, Dept Comp Sci, Urbana, IL USA
[6] Arizona State Univ, Sch Life Sci, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA
[7] Univ Georgia, Dept Entomol, Athens, GA 30602 USA
[8] Univ Illinois, Dept Anim Biol, Urbana, IL USA
[9] Okinawa Inst Sci & Technol, Ecol & Evolut Unit, Onna, Okinawa, Japan
[10] Univ Illinois, Dept Entomol, Urbana, IL USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
social parasite; ant; caste; phenotypic plasticity; genome; DIFFERENTIAL EXPRESSION ANALYSIS; RED HARVESTER ANT; GENE-EXPRESSION; RELAXED SELECTION; MATING FREQUENCY; EVOLUTION; INSECT; HYMENOPTERA; REPRODUCTION; ASSOCIATION;
D O I
10.1093/molbev/msv165
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
A central goal of biology is to uncover the genetic basis for the origin of new phenotypes. A particularly effective approach is to examine the genomic architecture of species that have secondarily lost a phenotype with respect to their close relatives. In the eusocial Hymenoptera, queens and workers have divergent phenotypes that may be produced via either expression of alternative sets of caste-specific genes and pathways or differences in expression patterns of a shared set of multifunctional genes. To distinguish between these two hypotheses, we investigated how secondary loss of the worker phenotype in workerless ant social parasites impacted genome evolution across two independent origins of social parasitism in the ant genera Pogonomyrmex and Vollenhovia. We sequenced the genomes of three social parasites and their most-closely related eusocial host species and compared gene losses in social parasites with gene expression differences between host queens and workers. Virtually all annotated genes were expressed to some degree in both castes of the host, with most shifting in queen-worker bias across developmental stages. As a result, despite >1My of divergence from the last common ancestor that had workers, the social parasites showed strikingly little evidence of gene loss, damaging mutations, or shifts in selection regime resulting from loss of the worker caste. This suggests that regulatory changes within a multifunctional genome, rather than sequence differences, have played a predominant role in the evolution of social parasitism, and perhaps also in the many gains and losses of phenotypes in the social insects.
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页码:2919 / 2931
页数:13
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