Division of Reproductive Biology Research, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, and Center for Genetic Medicine, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, United States of America.
PLoS Genet. 2010 Jul 15;6(7):e1001022. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1001022.
Sex-specific traits that lead to the production of dimorphic gametes, sperm in males and eggs in females, are fundamental for sexual reproduction and accordingly widespread among animals. Yet the sex-biased genes that underlie these sex-specific traits are under strong selective pressure, and as a result of adaptive evolution they often become divergent. Indeed out of hundreds of male or female fertility genes identified in diverse organisms, only a very small number of them are implicated specifically in reproduction in more than one lineage. Few genes have exhibited a sex-biased, reproductive-specific requirement beyond a given phylum, raising the question of whether any sex-specific gametogenesis factors could be conserved and whether gametogenesis might have evolved multiple times. Here we describe a metazoan origin of a conserved human reproductive protein, BOULE, and its prevalence from primitive basal metazoans to chordates. We found that BOULE homologs are present in the genomes of representative species of each of the major lineages of metazoans and exhibit reproductive-specific expression in all species examined, with a preponderance of male-biased expression. Examination of Boule evolution within insect and mammalian lineages revealed little evidence for accelerated evolution, unlike most reproductive genes. Instead, purifying selection was the major force behind Boule evolution. Furthermore, loss of function of mammalian Boule resulted in male-specific infertility and a global arrest of sperm development remarkably similar to the phenotype in an insect boule mutation. This work demonstrates the conservation of a reproductive protein throughout eumetazoa, its predominant testis-biased expression in diverse bilaterian species, and conservation of a male gametogenic requirement in mice. This shows an ancient gametogenesis requirement for Boule among Bilateria and supports a model of a common origin of spermatogenesis.
导致产生二态配子(雄性的精子和雌性的卵子)的性别特化特征是有性生殖的基础,因此在动物中广泛存在。然而,这些性别特化特征所依赖的性别偏向基因受到强烈的选择压力,因此在适应进化过程中,它们经常会发生分歧。事实上,在从各种生物体中鉴定出的数百个雄性或雌性生育基因中,只有极少数基因特别涉及一个以上谱系的生殖。很少有基因在特定的门以上表现出性别偏向的生殖特异性要求,这引发了一个问题,即是否存在可以保守的性别特化配子发生因子,以及配子发生是否可能已经进化了多次。在这里,我们描述了一个保守的人类生殖蛋白 BOULE 的后生动物起源及其从原始基干后生动物到脊索动物的普遍性。我们发现,BOULE 同源物存在于后生动物各大谱系的代表性物种的基因组中,并且在所有检查的物种中都表现出生殖特异性表达,雄性表达占优势。对昆虫和哺乳动物谱系中 Boule 进化的研究表明,与大多数生殖基因相比,几乎没有证据表明进化加速。相反,纯化选择是 Boule 进化的主要力量。此外,哺乳动物 Boule 的功能丧失导致雄性特异性不育和精子发育的全面停滞,这与昆虫 boule 突变的表型非常相似。这项工作证明了生殖蛋白在真后生动物中的保守性,其在各种两侧对称物种中的主要睾丸偏向表达,以及在小鼠中雄性配子发生要求的保守性。这表明在 Bilateria 中存在 Boule 的古老配子发生要求,并支持精子发生的共同起源模型。