Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, United States of America.
Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, United States of America ; Department of Computational and Systems Biology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States of America.
PLoS Genet. 2014 Jan;10(1):e1004108. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1004108. Epub 2014 Jan 16.
Seminal fluid proteins transferred from males to females during copulation are required for full fertility and can exert dramatic effects on female physiology and behavior. In Drosophila melanogaster, the seminal protein sex peptide (SP) affects mated females by increasing egg production and decreasing receptivity to courtship. These behavioral changes persist for several days because SP binds to sperm that are stored in the female. SP is then gradually released, allowing it to interact with its female-expressed receptor. The binding of SP to sperm requires five additional seminal proteins, which act together in a network. Hundreds of uncharacterized male and female proteins have been identified in this species, but individually screening each protein for network function would present a logistical challenge. To prioritize the screening of these proteins for involvement in the SP network, we used a comparative genomic method to identify candidate proteins whose evolutionary rates across the Drosophila phylogeny co-vary with those of the SP network proteins. Subsequent functional testing of 18 co-varying candidates by RNA interference identified three male seminal proteins and three female reproductive tract proteins that are each required for the long-term persistence of SP responses in females. Molecular genetic analysis showed the three new male proteins are required for the transfer of other network proteins to females and for SP to become bound to sperm that are stored in mated females. The three female proteins, in contrast, act downstream of SP binding and sperm storage. These findings expand the number of seminal proteins required for SP's actions in the female and show that multiple female proteins are necessary for the SP response. Furthermore, our functional analyses demonstrate that evolutionary rate covariation is a valuable predictive tool for identifying candidate members of interacting protein networks.
在交配过程中,从雄性转移到雌性的精液蛋白对于完全生育能力是必需的,并能对雌性的生理和行为产生显著影响。在黑腹果蝇中,精液蛋白性肽 (SP) 通过增加产卵量和降低对求偶的接受度来影响交配后的雌性。这些行为变化会持续几天,因为 SP 与储存在雌性体内的精子结合。然后 SP 逐渐释放,使其能够与其在雌性中表达的受体相互作用。SP 与精子的结合需要另外五个精液蛋白,它们在网络中共同作用。在这个物种中已经鉴定出数百种未被表征的雄性和雌性蛋白,但单独筛选每个蛋白的网络功能将带来后勤挑战。为了优先筛选这些蛋白参与 SP 网络,我们使用比较基因组方法来鉴定候选蛋白,这些候选蛋白在果蝇进化枝中的进化速率与 SP 网络蛋白的进化速率共变。随后通过 RNA 干扰对 18 个共变候选蛋白进行功能测试,鉴定出三个雄性精液蛋白和三个雌性生殖道蛋白,它们都需要 SP 对雌性的长期反应的持续存在。分子遗传分析表明,这三个新的雄性蛋白对于将其他网络蛋白转移到雌性和使 SP 与储存在交配后的雌性中的精子结合是必需的。相比之下,这三个雌性蛋白作用于 SP 结合和精子储存的下游。这些发现扩展了 SP 在雌性中发挥作用所需的精液蛋白数量,并表明多个雌性蛋白是 SP 反应所必需的。此外,我们的功能分析表明,进化速率共变是识别相互作用蛋白网络候选成员的有价值的预测工具。