Shorter John, Couch Charlene, Huang Wen, Carbone Mary Anna, Peiffer Jason, Anholt Robert R H, Mackay Trudy F C
Department of Biological Sciences, Program in Genetics and W. M. Keck Center for Behavioral Biology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695-7614.
Department of Biological Sciences, Program in Genetics and W. M. Keck Center for Behavioral Biology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695-7614
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2015 Jul 7;112(27):E3555-63. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1510104112. Epub 2015 Jun 22.
Aggression is an evolutionarily conserved complex behavior essential for survival and the organization of social hierarchies. With the exception of genetic variants associated with bioamine signaling, which have been implicated in aggression in many species, the genetic basis of natural variation in aggression is largely unknown. Drosophila melanogaster is a favorable model system for exploring the genetic basis of natural variation in aggression. Here, we performed genome-wide association analyses using the inbred, sequenced lines of the Drosophila melanogaster Genetic Reference Panel (DGRP) and replicate advanced intercross populations derived from the most and least aggressive DGRP lines. We identified genes that have been previously implicated in aggressive behavior as well as many novel loci, including gustatory receptor 63a (Gr63a), which encodes a subunit of the receptor for CO2, and genes associated with development and function of the nervous system. Although genes from the two association analyses were largely nonoverlapping, they mapped onto a genetic interaction network inferred from an analysis of pairwise epistasis in the DGRP. We used mutations and RNAi knock-down alleles to functionally validate 79% of the candidate genes and 75% of the candidate epistatic interactions tested. Epistasis for aggressive behavior causes cryptic genetic variation in the DGRP that is revealed by changing allele frequencies in the outbred populations derived from extreme DGRP lines. This phenomenon may pertain to other fitness traits and species, with implications for evolution, applied breeding, and human genetics.
攻击行为是一种在进化上保守的复杂行为,对生存和社会等级制度的组织至关重要。除了与生物胺信号传导相关的基因变异(在许多物种中这些变异与攻击行为有关)外,攻击行为自然变异的遗传基础在很大程度上尚不清楚。黑腹果蝇是探索攻击行为自然变异遗传基础的理想模型系统。在这里,我们使用黑腹果蝇遗传参考面板(DGRP)的近交、测序品系以及从最具攻击性和最不具攻击性的DGRP品系衍生而来的重复高级杂交群体进行了全基因组关联分析。我们鉴定出了先前与攻击行为有关的基因以及许多新的基因座,包括味觉受体63a(Gr63a),它编码二氧化碳受体的一个亚基,以及与神经系统发育和功能相关的基因。尽管两次关联分析中的基因在很大程度上不重叠,但它们映射到了一个从DGRP中两两上位性分析推断出的遗传相互作用网络上。我们使用突变和RNAi敲低等位基因对79%的候选基因和75%的测试候选上位性相互作用进行了功能验证。攻击行为的上位性在DGRP中导致了隐性遗传变异,这种变异在来自极端DGRP品系的远交群体中通过等位基因频率的变化得以揭示。这种现象可能与其他适应性性状和物种有关,对进化、应用育种和人类遗传学具有启示意义。