VanKuren Nicholas W, Chen Jianhai, Long Manyuan
Department of Ecology and Evolution, The University of Chicago, United States.
Department of Ecology and Evolution, The University of Chicago, United States.
Semin Cell Dev Biol. 2024 Jun-Jul;159-160:27-37. doi: 10.1016/j.semcdb.2024.01.005. Epub 2024 Feb 2.
The evolutionary forces underlying the rapid evolution in sequences and functions of new genes remain a mystery. Adaptation by natural selection explains the evolution of some new genes. However, many new genes perform sex-biased functions that have rapidly evolved over short evolutionary time scales, suggesting that new gene evolution may often be driven by conflicting selective pressures on males and females. It is well established that such sexual conflict (SC) plays a central role in maintaining phenotypic and genetic variation within populations, but the role of SC in driving new gene evolution remains essentially unknown. This review explores the connections between SC and new gene evolution through discussions of the concept of SC, the phenotypic and genetic signatures of SC in evolving populations, and the molecular mechanisms by which SC could drive the evolution of new genes. We synthesize recent work in this area with a discussion of the case of Apollo and Artemis, two extremely young genes (<200,000 years) in Drosophila melanogaster, which offered the first empirical insights into the evolutionary process by which SC could drive the evolution of new genes. These new duplicate genes exhibit the hallmarks of sexually antagonistic selection: rapid DNA and protein sequence evolution, essential sex-specific functions in gametogenesis, and complementary sex-biased expression patterns. Importantly, Apollo is essential for male fitness but detrimental to female fitness, while Artemis is essential for female fitness but detrimental to male fitness. These sexually antagonistic fitness effects and complementary changes to expression, sequence, and function suggest that these duplicates were selected for mitigating SC, but that SC has not been fully resolved. Finally, we propose Sexual Conflict Drive as a self-driven model to interpret the rapid evolution of new genes, explain the potential for SC and sexually antagonistic selection to contribute to long-term evolution, and suggest its utility for understanding the rapid evolution of new genes in gametogenesis.
新基因序列和功能快速进化背后的进化驱动力仍是个谜。自然选择导致的适应性变化解释了一些新基因的进化。然而,许多新基因具有性别偏向性功能,这些功能在较短的进化时间尺度上迅速进化,这表明新基因的进化可能常常受到雄性和雌性之间相互冲突的选择压力驱动。众所周知,这种性冲突(SC)在维持种群内的表型和遗传变异方面起着核心作用,但性冲突在驱动新基因进化中的作用基本上仍不为人知。本综述通过讨论性冲突的概念、进化种群中性冲突的表型和遗传特征,以及性冲突驱动新基因进化的分子机制,探索了性冲突与新基因进化之间的联系。我们综合了该领域的最新研究成果,并讨论了果蝇中两个极其年轻的基因(<20万年)——阿波罗基因和阿尔忒弥斯基因的案例,这为性冲突驱动新基因进化的过程提供了首个实证见解。这些新的重复基因展现出性拮抗选择的特征:DNA和蛋白质序列快速进化、在配子发生中具有基本的性别特异性功能,以及互补的性别偏向性表达模式。重要的是,阿波罗基因对雄性适合度至关重要,但对雌性适合度有害,而阿尔忒弥斯基因对雌性适合度至关重要,但对雄性适合度有害。这些性拮抗的适合度效应以及表达、序列和功能的互补变化表明,这些重复基因是为了缓解性冲突而被选择的,但性冲突尚未完全解决。最后,我们提出性冲突驱动作为一个自我驱动模型,以解释新基因的快速进化,解释性冲突和性拮抗选择对长期进化的潜在贡献,并表明其在理解配子发生中新基因快速进化方面的效用。