Garrigan Daniel, Kingan Sarah B, Geneva Anthony J, Vedanayagam Jeffrey P, Presgraves Daven C
Department of Biology, University of Rochester
Department of Biology, University of Rochester.
Genome Biol Evol. 2014 Sep 4;6(9):2444-58. doi: 10.1093/gbe/evu198.
Drosophila mauritiana is an Indian Ocean island endemic species that diverged from its two sister species, Drosophila simulans and Drosophila sechellia, approximately 240,000 years ago. Multiple forms of incomplete reproductive isolation have evolved among these species, including sexual, gametic, ecological, and intrinsic postzygotic barriers, with crosses among all three species conforming to Haldane's rule: F(1) hybrid males are sterile and F(1) hybrid females are fertile. Extensive genetic resources and the fertility of hybrid females have made D. mauritiana, in particular, an important model for speciation genetics. Analyses between D. mauritiana and both of its siblings have shown that the X chromosome makes a disproportionate contribution to hybrid male sterility. But why the X plays a special role in the evolution of hybrid sterility in these, and other, species remains an unsolved problem. To complement functional genetic analyses, we have investigated the population genomics of D. mauritiana, giving special attention to differences between the X and the autosomes. We present a de novo genome assembly of D. mauritiana annotated with RNAseq data and a whole-genome analysis of polymorphism and divergence from ten individuals. Our analyses show that, relative to the autosomes, the X chromosome has reduced nucleotide diversity but elevated nucleotide divergence; an excess of recurrent adaptive evolution at its protein-coding genes; an excess of recent, strong selective sweeps; and a large excess of satellite DNA. Interestingly, one of two centimorgan-scale selective sweeps on the D. mauritiana X chromosome spans a region containing two sex-ratio meiotic drive elements and a high concentration of satellite DNA. Furthermore, genes with roles in reproduction and chromosome biology are enriched among genes that have histories of recurrent adaptive protein evolution. Together, these genome-wide analyses suggest that genetic conflict and frequent positive natural selection on the X chromosome have shaped the molecular evolutionary history of D. mauritiana, refining our understanding of the possible causes of the large X-effect in speciation.
毛里求斯果蝇是一种印度洋岛屿特有物种,大约在24万年前与其两个姐妹物种——拟果蝇和塞舌尔果蝇分化开来。这些物种之间已经进化出多种形式的不完全生殖隔离,包括性隔离、配子隔离、生态隔离和内在合子后隔离,这三个物种之间的杂交都符合霍尔丹法则:F(1) 代杂种雄性不育,F(1) 代杂种雌性可育。丰富的遗传资源以及杂种雌性的可育性使得毛里求斯果蝇尤其成为物种形成遗传学的重要模型。对毛里求斯果蝇与其两个姐妹物种的分析表明,X染色体对杂种雄性不育的贡献不成比例。但为什么X染色体在这些物种以及其他物种的杂种不育进化中发挥特殊作用仍是一个未解之谜。为了补充功能基因分析,我们研究了毛里求斯果蝇的群体基因组学,特别关注X染色体与常染色体之间的差异。我们展示了一个用RNAseq数据注释的毛里求斯果蝇的从头基因组组装,以及对十个个体的多态性和分化的全基因组分析。我们的分析表明,相对于常染色体,X染色体的核苷酸多样性降低,但核苷酸分化增加;其蛋白质编码基因存在过多的反复适应性进化;近期有过多强烈的选择性清除;以及大量多余的卫星DNA。有趣的是,毛里求斯果蝇X染色体上两个厘摩规模的选择性清除之一跨越了一个包含两个性比减数分裂驱动元件和高浓度卫星DNA的区域。此外,在具有反复适应性蛋白质进化历史的基因中,参与生殖和染色体生物学的基因富集。总之,这些全基因组分析表明,X染色体上的遗传冲突和频繁的正向自然选择塑造了毛里求斯果蝇的分子进化历史,深化了我们对物种形成中X染色体大效应可能原因的理解。