U.S. Department of Agriculture/Agricultural Research Station, Bioscience Research Laboratory, 1605 Albrecht Boulevard, Fargo, ND, 58102, USA.
Department of Biological Sciences, National University of Singapore, 14 Science Dr 4, Singapore, 117543, Singapore.
BMC Evol Biol. 2018 Oct 10;18(1):151. doi: 10.1186/s12862-018-1265-3.
The males of some sepsid species (Sepsidae: Diptera) have abdominal appendages that are remarkable in several ways. They are sexually dimorphic, have a complex evolutionary history of gain and loss, and can be jointed and thus highly mobile. The sternite brushes are used extensively in complex courtship behaviors that differ considerably between species and during mating. The abdominal appendages have a novel developmental pathway developing from histoblast nests rather than imaginal discs.
We focus on the evolution of cell number, nest area, and segment length in both sexes to understand how this tissue relates to the formation of novel abdominal appendages. We map histoblast nest size of wandering-phase larvae of 17 species across 10 genera to a phylogenetic tree of Sepsidae and demonstrate that abdominal appendages require significant increases of histoblast nest size and cell number in most species while one species produces small appendages even without such modifications. In species with particularly large appendages, not only the nests on the fourth, but nests in neighboring segments are enlarged (Themira biloba, Themira putris). The loss of abdominal appendages corresponds to the loss of an enlarged fourth histoblast nest, although one species showed an exception to this pattern. One species that constitutes an independent origin of abdominal appendages (Perochaeta dikowi) uses an unusual developmental mechanism in that the histoblast nest sizes are not sexually dimorphic.
The surprisingly high diversity in histoblast size and degree of sexual dimorphism suggests that the developmental mechanism used for abdominal appendage formation in sepsids is highly adaptable. The presence of appendages usually correlate with increased histoblast cell number and in most cases appendage loss results in a return to ancestral histoblast morphology. However, we also identify several exceptions that indicate the abdominal appendages have a malleable developmental origin that is responsive to selection.
一些虱蝇科(双翅目:虱蝇科)雄性的腹部附肢在几个方面都很显著。它们具有性别二态性,在获得和失去方面具有复杂的进化历史,并且可以连接,因此具有高度的活动性。尾节刷在不同物种和交配期间的复杂求偶行为中被广泛使用。腹部附肢具有一种从组织母细胞巢而不是体节盘发育的新颖发育途径。
我们专注于两性细胞数量、巢区和节段长度的进化,以了解这种组织与新的腹部附肢的形成有何关系。我们将 17 种 10 属虱蝇科 wandering-phase 幼虫的组织母细胞巢大小映射到虱蝇科的系统发育树上,并证明大多数物种的腹部附肢需要组织母细胞巢大小和细胞数量的显著增加,而有一种物种即使没有这种改变也能产生小的附肢。在具有特别大附肢的物种中,不仅第四节的巢,而且相邻节段的巢都增大了(Themira biloba、Themira putris)。腹部附肢的丧失对应于第四组织母细胞巢的增大丧失,尽管有一种物种的模式与此不同。一种构成腹部附肢独立起源的物种(Perochaeta dikowi)使用一种不寻常的发育机制,即组织母细胞巢大小没有性别二态性。
组织母细胞大小和性别二态性的惊人多样性表明,虱蝇科腹部附肢形成所使用的发育机制具有高度的适应性。附肢的存在通常与组织母细胞数量的增加相关,并且在大多数情况下,附肢的丧失导致回到祖先的组织母细胞形态。然而,我们也发现了几个例外,表明腹部附肢具有可塑的发育起源,对选择有反应。