Abstract

The birth-and-death evolutionary model proposes that some members of a multigene family are phylogenetically stable and persist as a single copy over time, whereas other members are phylogenetically unstable and undergo frequent duplication and loss. Functional studies suggest that stable genes are likely to encode essential functions, whereas rapidly evolving genes reflect phenotypic differences in traits that diverge rapidly among species. One such class of rapidly diverging traits are insect cuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs), which play dual roles in chemical communications as short-range recognition pheromones as well as protecting the insect from desiccation. Insect CHCs diverge rapidly between related species leading to ecological adaptation and/or reproductive isolation. Because the CHC and essential fatty acid biosynthetic pathways share common genes, we hypothesized that genes involved in the synthesis of CHCs would be evolutionary unstable, whereas those involved in fatty acid-associated essential functions would be evolutionary stable. To test this hypothesis, we investigated the evolutionary history of the fatty acyl-CoA reductases (FARs) gene family that encodes enzymes in CHC synthesis. We compiled a unique data set of 200 FAR proteins across 12 Drosophila species. We uncovered a broad diversity in FAR content which is generated by gene duplications, subsequent gene losses, and alternative splicing. We also show that FARs expressed in oenocytes and presumably involved in CHC synthesis are more unstable than FARs from other tissues. Taken together, our study provides empirical evidence that a comparative approach investigating the birth-and-death evolution of gene families can identify candidate genes involved in rapidly diverging traits between species.

Highlights

  • Multigene families are important contributors to molecular and organismal evolution

  • We show that fatty acyl-CoA reductases (FARs) expressed in oenocytes and presumably involved in cuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs) synthesis are more unstable than FARs from other tissues

  • We have shown that 5 out of 17 FARs found in the D. melanogaster genome are evolutionary unstable

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Summary

Introduction

Multigene families are important contributors to molecular and organismal evolution. Member genes descend from single founder genes that duplicate, diverge in sequence (Nei and Rooney 2005). The concerted evolution model hypothesizes that all member genes in the family evolve as a unit. This model is capable of explaining aspects of the evolution of clustered ribosomal RNAs (Brown et al 1972). The birth-and-death model proposes that the members of a gene family evolve independently, meaning that while some members of a gene family are phylogenetically stable, others are unstable and are gained or lost over time by DNA duplications, deletions, and other pseudogenization events (Hughes and Nei 1989; Lynch and Conery 2000; Sjodin et al 2007; Plata and Vitkup 2014)

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