Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and Museum of Zoology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
BMC Evol Biol. 2014 Jun 5;14:123. doi: 10.1186/1471-2148-14-123.
Predatory marine gastropods of the genus Conus exhibit substantial variation in venom composition both within and among species. Apart from mechanisms associated with extensive turnover of gene families and rapid evolution of genes that encode venom components ('conotoxins'), the evolution of distinct conotoxin expression patterns is an additional source of variation that may drive interspecific differences in the utilization of species' 'venom gene space'. To determine the evolution of expression patterns of venom genes of Conus species, we evaluated the expression of A-superfamily conotoxin genes of a set of closely related Conus species by comparing recovered transcripts of A-superfamily genes that were previously identified from the genomes of these species. We modified community phylogenetics approaches to incorporate phylogenetic history and disparity of genes and their expression profiles to determine patterns of venom gene space utilization.
Less than half of the A-superfamily gene repertoire of these species is expressed, and only a few orthologous genes are coexpressed among species. Species exhibit substantially distinct expression strategies, with some expressing sets of closely related loci ('under-dispersed' expression of available genes) while others express sets of more disparate genes ('over-dispersed' expression). In addition, expressed genes show higher dN/dS values than either unexpressed or ancestral genes; this implies that expression exposes genes to selection and facilitates rapid evolution of these genes. Few recent lineage-specific gene duplicates are expressed simultaneously, suggesting that expression divergence among redundant gene copies may be established shortly after gene duplication.
Our study demonstrates that venom gene space is explored differentially by Conus species, a process that effectively permits the independent and rapid evolution of venoms in these species.
掠夺性海洋腹足纲动物芋螺属在种内和种间的毒液组成都有很大的变化。除了与基因家族广泛替换和编码毒液成分的基因(“芋螺毒素”)快速进化相关的机制外,独特的芋螺毒素表达模式的进化是另一个可能导致物种“毒液基因空间”利用的种间差异的来源。为了确定芋螺属物种毒液基因表达模式的进化,我们通过比较从这些物种基因组中先前鉴定出的 A-超家族基因的回收转录本,评估了一组密切相关的芋螺属物种的 A-超家族芋螺毒素基因的表达。我们修改了群落系统发生学方法,将基因及其表达谱的系统发生历史和差异纳入其中,以确定毒液基因空间利用模式。
这些物种的 A-超家族基因库中不到一半的基因被表达,而且物种之间只有少数直系同源基因共表达。物种表现出明显不同的表达策略,有些表达一系列密切相关的基因座(“可用基因的分散表达”),而另一些则表达一系列差异较大的基因(“过度分散表达”)。此外,表达的基因比未表达的或祖先的基因具有更高的 dN/dS 值;这意味着表达使基因受到选择,并促进这些基因的快速进化。很少有最近的谱系特异性基因重复同时表达,这表明冗余基因拷贝之间的表达分歧可能在基因复制后不久就建立起来。
我们的研究表明,芋螺属物种以不同的方式探索毒液基因空间,这一过程有效地允许这些物种的毒液独立和快速进化。