Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management, University of California, Berkeley, 130 Mulford Hall, #3114, Berkeley, CA, 94720-3114, USA.
MIT-WHOI Joint Program in Oceanography/Applied Ocean Science and Engineering, Cambridge, Woods Hole, MA, USA.
BMC Ecol Evol. 2021 Mar 22;21(1):48. doi: 10.1186/s12862-021-01779-9.
A striking aspect of evolution is that it often converges on similar trajectories. Evolutionary convergence can occur in deep time or over short time scales, and is associated with the imposition of similar selective pressures. Repeated convergent events provide a framework to infer the genetic basis of adaptive traits. The current study examines the genetic basis of secondary web loss within web-building spiders (Araneoidea). Specifically, we use a lineage of spiders in the genus Tetragnatha (Tetragnathidae) that has diverged into two clades associated with the relatively recent (5 mya) colonization of, and subsequent adaptive radiation within, the Hawaiian Islands. One clade has adopted a cursorial lifestyle, and the other has retained the ancestral behavior of capturing prey with sticky orb webs. We explore how these behavioral phenotypes are reflected in the morphology of the spinning apparatus and internal silk glands, and the expression of silk genes. Several sister families to the Tetragnathidae have undergone similar web loss, so we also ask whether convergent patterns of selection can be detected in these lineages.
The cursorial clade has lost spigots associated with the sticky spiral of the orb web. This appears to have been accompanied by loss of silk glands themselves. We generated phylogenies of silk proteins (spidroins), which showed that the transcriptomes of cursorial Tetragnatha contain all major spidroins except for flagelliform. We also found an uncharacterized spidroin that has higher expression in cursorial species. We found evidence for convergent selection acting on this spidroin, as well as genes involved in protein metabolism, in the cursorial Tetragnatha and divergent cursorial lineages in the families Malkaridae and Mimetidae.
Our results provide strong evidence that independent web loss events and the associated adoption of a cursorial lifestyle are based on similar genetic mechanisms. Many genes we identified as having evolved convergently are associated with protein synthesis, degradation, and processing, which are processes that play important roles in silk production. This study demonstrates, in the case of independent evolution of web loss, that similar selective pressures act on many of the same genes to produce the same phenotypes and behaviors.
进化的一个显著特点是它经常趋同于相似的轨迹。进化趋同可以在深时或短时间尺度上发生,并且与相似的选择压力有关。重复的趋同事件为推断适应性特征的遗传基础提供了框架。本研究检查了结网蜘蛛(Araneoidea)中次生蛛网缺失的遗传基础。具体来说,我们使用 Tetragnatha 属(Tetragnathidae)中的一个蜘蛛谱系,该谱系分化为两个支系,与相对较近的(500 万年前)夏威夷群岛的殖民和随后的适应性辐射有关。一个支系采用了奔跑的生活方式,而另一个支系保留了用粘性圆网捕捉猎物的祖先行为。我们探索这些行为表型如何反映在纺丝装置和内部丝腺的形态以及丝基因的表达上。与 Tetragnathidae 有亲缘关系的几个科也经历了类似的蛛网缺失,因此我们也询问这些谱系中是否可以检测到趋同选择模式。
奔跑支系失去了与圆网粘性螺旋相关的刺突。这似乎伴随着丝腺本身的缺失。我们构建了丝蛋白(蜘蛛丝蛋白)的系统发育树,结果表明,奔跑的 Tetragnatha 的转录组包含除了鞭毛状以外的所有主要蜘蛛丝蛋白。我们还发现了一种在奔跑物种中表达较高的未表征的蜘蛛丝蛋白。我们发现了趋同选择作用于这种蜘蛛丝蛋白的证据,以及在奔跑的 Tetragnatha 和 Malkaridae 和 Mimetidae 家族中分化的奔跑谱系中涉及蛋白质代谢的基因。
我们的研究结果为独立的蛛网缺失事件和相关的奔跑生活方式的采用基于相似的遗传机制提供了有力的证据。我们确定为趋同进化的许多基因与蛋白质合成、降解和加工有关,这些过程在丝生产中起着重要作用。本研究证明,在独立进化的蛛网缺失情况下,相似的选择压力作用于许多相同的基因,产生相同的表型和行为。