Comparative transcriptomics reveals the conserved building blocks involved in parallel evolution of diverse phenotypic traits in ants

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Morandin , C , Tin , M M Y , Abril , S , Gomez , C , Pontieri , L , Schiott , M , Sundström , L , Tsuji , K , Pedersen , J S , Helanterä , H & Mikheyev , A S 2016 , ' Comparative transcriptomics reveals the conserved building blocks involved in parallel evolution of diverse phenotypic traits in ants ' , Genome Biology , vol. 17 , 43 . https://doi.org/10.1186/s13059-016-0902-7

Title: Comparative transcriptomics reveals the conserved building blocks involved in parallel evolution of diverse phenotypic traits in ants
Author: Morandin, Claire; Tin, Mandy M. Y.; Abril, Silvia; Gomez, Crisanto; Pontieri, Luigi; Schiott, Morten; Sundström, Liselotte; Tsuji, Kazuki; Pedersen, Jes Soe; Helanterä, Heikki; Mikheyev, Alexander S.
Contributor organization: Biosciences
Tvärminne Zoological Station
Social Evolution in Insects
Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
Heikki Oskari Helanterä / Principal Investigator
Date: 2016-03-07
Language: eng
Number of pages: 19
Belongs to series: Genome Biology
ISSN: 1465-6906
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s13059-016-0902-7
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10138/208080
Abstract: Background: Reproductive division of labor in eusocial insects is a striking example of a shared genetic background giving rise to alternative phenotypes, namely queen and worker castes. Queen and worker phenotypes play major roles in the evolution of eusocial insects. Their behavior, morphology and physiology underpin many ecologically relevant colony-level traits, which evolved in parallel in multiple species. Results: Using queen and worker transcriptomic data from 16 ant species we tested the hypothesis that conserved sets of genes are involved in ant reproductive division of labor. We further hypothesized that such sets of genes should also be involved in the parallel evolution of other key traits. We applied weighted gene co-expression network analysis, which clusters co-expressed genes into modules, whose expression levels can be summarized by their 'eigengenes'. Eigengenes of most modules were correlated with phenotypic differentiation between queens and workers. Furthermore, eigengenes of some modules were correlated with repeated evolution of key phenotypes such as complete worker sterility, the number of queens per colony, and even invasiveness. Finally, connectivity and expression levels of genes within the co-expressed network were strongly associated with the strength of selection. Although caste-associated sets of genes evolve faster than non-caste-associated, we found no evidence for queen-or worker-associated co-expressed genes evolving faster than one another. Conclusions: These results identify conserved functionally important genomic units that likely serve as building blocks of phenotypic innovation, and allow the remarkable breadth of parallel evolution seen in ants, and possibly other eusocial insects as well.
Subject: Social insects
Caste differentiation
Gene expression
Parallel evolution
Phenotypic plasticity
Gene co-expression network
1181 Ecology, evolutionary biology
Peer reviewed: Yes
Rights: cc_by
Usage restriction: openAccess
Self-archived version: publishedVersion


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