Evolutionary Novelty in a Butterfly Wing Pattern through Enhancer Shuffling

Archive ouverte

Wallbank, Richard, W R | Baxter, Simon | Pardo-Diaz, Carolina | Hanly, Joseph, J | Martin, Simon | Mallet, James | Dasmahapatra, Kanchon, K | Salazar, Camilo | Joron, Mathieu | Nadeau, Nicola | Mcmillan, W. Owen, Owen | Jiggins, Chris, D

Edité par CCSD ; Public Library of Science -

International audience. An important goal in evolutionary biology is to understand the genetic changes underlying novel morphological structures. We investigated the origins of a complex wing pattern found among Amazonian Heliconius butterflies. Genome sequence data from 142 individuals across 17 species identified narrow regions associated with two distinct red colour pattern elements, dennis and ray. We hypothesise that these modules in non-coding sequence represent distinct cis-regulatory loci that control expression of the transcription factor optix, which in turn controls red pattern variation across Heliconius. Phylogenetic analysis of the two elements demonstrated that they have distinct evolutionary histories and that novel adaptive morphological variation was created by shuffling these cis-regulatory modules through recombination between divergent lineages. In addition, recombination of modules into different combinations within species further contributes to diversity. Analysis of the timing of diversification in these two regions supports the hypothesis of introgression moving regulatory modules between species, rather than shared ancestral variation. The dennis phenotype introgressed into Heliconius melpomene at about the same time that ray originated in this group, while ray introgressed back into H. elevatus much more recently. We show that shuffling of existing enhancer elements both within and between species provides a mechanism for rapid diversification and generation of novel morphological combinations during adaptive radiation.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

The gene cortex controls mimicry and crypsis in butterflies and moths

Archive ouverte | Nadeau, Nicola, J | CCSD

International audience. The wing patterns of butterflies and moths (Lepidoptera) are diverse and striking examples of evolutionary diversification by natural selection 1,2. Lepidopteran wing colour patterns are a ke...

Genomic architecture and introgression shape a butterfly radiation

Archive ouverte | Edelman, Nathaniel, B | CCSD

International audience. We used 20 de novo genome assemblies to probe the speciation history and architecture of gene flow in rapidly radiating Heliconius butterflies. Our tests to distinguish incomplete lineage sor...

Selective sweeps on novel and introgressed variation shape mimicry loci in a butterfly adaptive radiation

Archive ouverte | Moest, Markus | CCSD

International audience. Natural selection leaves distinct signatures in the genome that can reveal the targets and history of adaptive evolution. By analysing high-coverage genome sequence data from 4 major colour p...

Chargement des enrichissements...