Department of Biology, University of Iowa, USA.
Mol Biol Evol. 2012 Dec;29(12):3873-86. doi: 10.1093/molbev/mss190. Epub 2012 Jul 26.
The X chromosome has a large effect on hybrid dysfunction, particularly on hybrid male sterility. Although the evidence for this so-called large-X effect is clear, its molecular causes are not yet fully understood. One possibility is that, under certain conditions, evolution proceeds faster in X-linked than in autosomal loci (i.e., faster-X effect) due to both natural selection and their hemizygosity in males, an effect that is expected to be greatest in genes with male-biased expression. Here, I study genome-wide variation in transcript abundance between Drosophila yakuba and D. santomea, within these species and in their hybrid males to evaluate both the faster-X and large-X effects at the level of expression. I find that in X-linked male-biased genes (MBGs) expression evolves faster than in their autosomal counterparts, an effect that is accompanied by a unique reduction in expression polymorphism. This suggests that Darwinian selection is driving expression differences between species, likely enhanced by the hemizygosity of the X chromosome in males. Despite the recent split of the two sister species under study, abundant changes in both cis- and trans-regulatory elements underlie expression divergence in the majority of the genes analyzed, with significant differences in allelic ratios of transcript abundance between the two reciprocal F(1) hybrid males. Cis-trans coevolution at molecular level, evolved shortly after populations become isolated, may therefore contribute to explain the breakdown of the regulation of gene expression in hybrid males. Additionally, the X chromosome plays a large role in this hybrid male misexpression, which affects not only MBG but also, to a lesser degree, nonsex-biased genes. Interestingly, hybrid male misexpression is concentrated mostly in autosomal genes, likely facilitated by the rapid evolution of sex-linked trans-acting factors. I suggest that the faster evolution of X-linked MBGs, at both protein and expression levels, contributes to explain the large effect of the X chromosome on hybrid male sterility, likely mediating widespread autosomal misexpression through the preferential recognition of cis-regulatory elements by conspecific trans-acting factors (i.e., cis-trans conspecific recognition).
X 染色体对杂种不育有很大的影响,尤其是对杂种雄性不育。尽管这种所谓的大 X 效应的证据是明确的,但它的分子原因尚不完全清楚。一种可能性是,在某些条件下,进化在 X 连锁基因中比在常染色体基因中更快(即更快 X 效应),这是由于自然选择和它们在雄性中的半合性,这种效应在具有雄性偏性表达的基因中预计最大。在这里,我研究了 Drosophila yakuba 和 D. santomea 之间转录丰度的全基因组变异,在这些物种及其杂种雄性中评估了表达水平的更快 X 效应和大 X 效应。我发现,在 X 连锁雄性偏性基因(MBGs)中,表达的进化速度快于其常染色体对应基因,这种效应伴随着表达多态性的独特降低。这表明达尔文选择正在驱动物种之间的表达差异,可能是由于雄性中 X 染色体的半合性增强了这种选择。尽管这两个姐妹物种最近才分裂,但在大多数分析的基因中,顺式和反式调控元件都发生了丰富的变化,两个相互的 F(1)杂种雄性之间的转录丰度等位基因比值存在显著差异。分子水平上的顺反式协同进化,在种群隔离后不久就进化了,可能有助于解释杂种雄性中基因表达调控的崩溃。此外,X 染色体在这种杂种雄性错误表达中起着重要作用,不仅影响 MBG,而且在较小程度上也影响非性别偏性基因。有趣的是,杂种雄性错误表达主要集中在常染色体基因上,这可能是由于性连锁反式作用因子的快速进化所致。我认为,X 连锁 MBG 在蛋白质和表达水平上的更快进化,有助于解释 X 染色体对杂种雄性不育的巨大影响,可能通过同种反式作用因子对顺式调控元件的优先识别来介导广泛的常染色体错误表达(即顺反式同种识别)。