Rai K S, Black W C
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Notre Dame, Indiana 46556, USA.
Adv Genet. 1999;41:1-33. doi: 10.1016/s0065-2660(08)60149-2.
A great deal of information has been accumulated on chromosome numbers and heterochromatin distribution as well as on genome size and organization in the mosquito family Culicidae. A number of trends in genome evolution emerge when these data are reviewed in light of recent cladistic phylogenies of Culicidae and its sister families. Anophelinae have heteromorphic sex chromosomes and a small genome size, and repetitive elements are distributed in a long-period interspersion pattern. In contrast, Culicinae have homomorphic sex chromosomes, and repetitive DNA is organized in a short-period interspersion pattern. There has been a general increase in genome size during the evolution of culicine tribes. The organization of the ancestral culicid genome remains uncertain awaiting studies on genome organization in Chaoboridae-Corethrellidae taxa. The most parsimonious hypothesis for the evolution of sex chromosomes and genome organization in Culicidae would be that homomorphic sex chromosomes and a long-period interspersion pattern was ancestral in lineages leading to Toxorhynchitinae and Culcinae. Larger genomes developed in subsequent culicine lineages through accumulation of short-period interspersed repetitive elements. Heteromorphic sex chromosomes evolved early in the evolution of Anophelinae, and a long-period interspersion pattern was retained. The alternative scenario proposed by Rao and Rai (1987a) is that Culicidae arose from a chaoborid Mochlonyx-like ancestor with heteromorphic sex chromosomes and possibly short-period interspersion. This scenario would require the loss of heteromorphic sex chromosomes in the lineage leading to Toxorhynchitinae and Culicinae and the "shedding" of repetitive elements in the lineage leading to Anophelinae. Several interesting patterns have emerged from studies of C-banding, and the distribution of heterochromatin in Culicidae and phylogenies derived from these studies are supported by the modern cladistic analyses. Recent intensive multipoint linkage map studies suggest that recombination frequencies per genome have remained relatively constant over the course of culicid evolution such that Anophelinae, with a relatively small genome size, has a linkage map of similar size to Aedini. As a consequence, taxa in Anophelinae have higher amounts of recombination per haploid genome size than Culicinae. Although several key questions have yet to be addressed, the Culicidae remain one of the best-studied systems of genome evolution in animals.
关于蚊科昆虫的染色体数目、异染色质分布以及基因组大小和组织,已经积累了大量信息。当根据蚊科及其姐妹科最近的分支系统发育对这些数据进行审视时,基因组进化的一些趋势就显现出来了。按蚊亚科具有异形性染色体和较小的基因组大小,重复元件以长周期散布模式分布。相比之下,库蚊亚科具有同形性染色体,重复DNA以短周期散布模式组织。在库蚊族的进化过程中,基因组大小总体上有所增加。在摇蚊科 - 大蚊科类群的基因组组织研究完成之前,蚊科祖先基因组的组织情况仍不确定。关于蚊科性染色体和基因组组织进化的最简约假设是,同形性染色体和长周期散布模式是通向巨蚊亚科和库蚊亚科的谱系中的祖先特征。在随后的库蚊谱系中,通过短周期散布重复元件的积累形成了更大的基因组。异形性染色体在按蚊亚科进化早期就已出现,并且保留了长周期散布模式。Rao和Rai(1987a)提出的另一种情况是,蚊科起源于具有异形性染色体且可能是短周期散布的类似摇蚊属的祖先。这种情况将需要在通向巨蚊亚科和库蚊亚科的谱系中失去异形性染色体,并在通向按蚊亚科的谱系中“去除”重复元件。对C带的研究出现了几种有趣的模式,蚊科中异染色质的分布以及从这些研究得出的系统发育得到了现代分支分析的支持。最近密集的多点连锁图谱研究表明,在蚊科进化过程中,每个基因组中的重组频率相对保持恒定,因此基因组大小相对较小的按蚊亚科具有与伊蚊族大小相似的连锁图谱。因此,按蚊亚科的类群每单倍体基因组大小的重组量比库蚊亚科更高。尽管仍有几个关键问题有待解决,但蚊科仍然是动物基因组进化研究得最好的系统之一。