Abstract

Satellite DNA (satDNA) is an abundant class of tandemly repeated noncoding sequences, showing high rate of change in sequence, abundance, and physical location. However, the mechanisms promoting these changes are still controversial. The library model was put forward to explain the conservation of some satDNAs for long periods, predicting that related species share a common collection of satDNAs, which mostly experience quantitative changes. Here, we tested the library model by analyzing three satDNAs in ten species of Schistocerca grasshoppers. This group represents a valuable material because it diversified during the last 7.9 Myr across the American continent from the African desert locust (Schistocerca gregaria), and this thus illuminates the direction of evolutionary changes. By combining bioinformatic and cytogenetic, we tested whether these three satDNA families found in S. gregaria are also present in nine American species, and whether differential gains and/or losses have occurred in the lineages. We found that the three satDNAs are present in all species but display remarkable interspecies differences in their abundance and sequences while being highly consistent with genus phylogeny. The number of chromosomal loci where satDNA is present was also consistent with phylogeny for two satDNA families but not for the other. Our results suggest eminently chance events for satDNA evolution. Several evolutionary trends clearly imply either massive amplifications or contractions, thus closely fitting the library model prediction that changes are mostly quantitative. Finally, we found that satDNA amplifications or contractions may influence the evolution of monomer consensus sequences and by chance playing a major role in driftlike dynamics.

Highlights

  • Satellite DNA is a heterogeneous collection of noncoding nuclear sequences that exists in hundreds to thousands of copies tandemly arranged at one or more chromosomal loci

  • By combining bioinformatic and cytogenetic, we tested whether these three Satellite DNA (satDNA) families found in S. gregaria are present in nine American species, and whether differential gains and/or losses have occurred in the lineages

  • Our combined approach of low-coverage high-throughput sequencing and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) mapping in ten grasshopper species belonging to the genus Schistocerca has revealed that the three satDNA families analyzed are conserved in the ten species, indicating that these satDNAs were part of the “library” present almost 8 Ma in the ancestor

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Summary

Introduction

Satellite DNA (satDNA) is a heterogeneous collection of noncoding nuclear sequences that exists in hundreds to thousands of copies tandemly arranged at one or more chromosomal loci. Across eukaryotes, it is often located within the gene-poor heterochromatin of centromeres and telomeres, albeit satDNAs have been reported on euchromatin in some species (see Charlesworth et al 1994; Ugarkovic and Plohl 2002; Larracuente 2014; Ruiz-Ruano et al 2016; Garrido-Ramos 2017).

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