Molecular Evolution of Drosophila Cuticular Protein Genes
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Several multigene families have been described that together encode scores of structural cuticular proteins in Drosophila, although the functional significance of this diversity remains to be explored. Here I investigate the evolutionary histories of several multigene families (CPR, Tweedle, CPLCG, and CPF/CPFL) that vary in age, size, and sequence complexity, using sequenced Drosophila genomes and mosquito outgroups. My objective is to describe the rates and mechanisms of 'cuticle-ome' divergence, in order to identify conserved and rapidly evolving elements. I also investigate potential examples of interlocus gene conversion and concerted evolution within these families during Drosophila evolution. The absolute rate of change in gene number (per million years) is an order of magnitude lower for cuticular protein families within Drosophila than it is among Drosophila and the two mosquito taxa, implying that major transitions in the cuticle proteome have occurred at higher taxonomic levels. Several hotspots of intergenic conversion and/or gene turnover were identified, e.g. some gene pairs have independently undergone intergenic conversion within different lineages. Some gene conversion hotspots were characterized by conversion tracts initiating near nucleotide repeats within coding regions, and similar repeats were found within concertedly evolving cuticular protein genes in Anopheles gambiae. Rates of amino-acid substitution were generally severalfold higher along the branch connecting the Sophophora and Drosophila species groups, and 13 genes have Ka/Ks significantly greater than one along this branch, indicating adaptive divergence. Insect cuticular proteins appear to be a source of adaptive evolution within genera and, at higher taxonomic levels, subject to periods of gene-family expansion and contraction followed by quiescence. However, this relative stasis is belied by hotspots of molecular evolution, particularly concerted evolution, during the diversification of Drosophila. The prominent association between interlocus gene conversion and repeats within the coding sequence of interacting genes suggests that the latter promote strand exchange.
Pri peptides temporally coordinate transcriptional programs during epidermal differentiation.
Gallois M, Menoret D, Marques-Prieto S, Montigny A, Valenti P, Moussian B Sci Adv. 2024; 10(6):eadg8816.
PMID: 38335295 PMC: 10857433. DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adg8816.
parasitoids go to space: Unexpected effects of spaceflight on hosts and their parasitoids.
Chou J, Ramroop J, Saravia-Butler A, Wey B, Lera M, Torres M iScience. 2024; 27(1):108759.
PMID: 38261932 PMC: 10797188. DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2023.108759.
Viruses in Laboratory and Their Impact on Host Gene Expression.
Kuyateh O, Obbard D Viruses. 2023; 15(9).
PMID: 37766256 PMC: 10537266. DOI: 10.3390/v15091849.
TATA and paused promoters active in differentiated tissues have distinct expression characteristics.
Ramalingam V, Natarajan M, Johnston J, Zeitlinger J Mol Syst Biol. 2021; 17(2):e9866.
PMID: 33543829 PMC: 7863008. DOI: 10.15252/msb.20209866.
Volovych O, Lin Z, Du J, Jiang H, Zou Z Insect Sci. 2019; 27(5):998-1018.
PMID: 31317624 PMC: 7497268. DOI: 10.1111/1744-7917.12711.