Abstract

BackgroundMate choice is of central importance to most animals, influencing population structure, speciation, and ultimately the survival of a species. Mating behavior of male brachionid rotifers is triggered by the product of a chemosensory gene, a glycoprotein on the body surface of females called the mate recognition pheromone. The mate recognition pheromone has been biochemically characterized, but little was known about the gene(s). We describe the isolation and characterization of the mate recognition pheromone gene through protein purification, N-terminal amino acid sequence determination, identification of the mate recognition pheromone gene from a cDNA library, sequencing, and RNAi knockdown to confirm the functional role of the mate recognition pheromone gene in rotifer mating.ResultsA 29 kD protein capable of eliciting rotifer male circling was isolated by high-performance liquid chromatography. Two transcript types containing the N-terminal sequence were identified in a cDNA library; further characterization by screening a genomic library and by polymerase chain reaction revealed two genes belonging to each type. Each gene begins with a signal peptide region followed by nearly perfect repeats of an 87 to 92 codon motif with no codons between repeats and the final motif prematurely terminated by the stop codon. The two Type A genes contain four and seven repeats and the two Type B genes contain three and five repeats, respectively. Only the Type B gene with three repeats encodes a peptide with a molecular weight of 29 kD. Each repeat of the Type B gene products contains three asparagines as potential sites for N-glycosylation; there are no asparagines in the Type A genes. RNAi with Type A double-stranded RNA did not result in less circling than in the phosphate-buffered saline control, but transfection with Type B double-stranded RNA significantly reduced male circling by 17%. The very low divergence between repeat units, even at synonymous positions, suggests that the repeats are kept nearly identical through a process of concerted evolution. Information-rich molecules like surface glycoproteins are well adapted for chemical communication and aquatic animals may have evolved signaling systems based on these compounds, whereas insects use cuticular hydrocarbons.ConclusionOwing to its critical role in mating, the mate recognition pheromone gene will be a useful molecular marker for exploring the mechanisms and rates of selection and the evolution of reproductive isolation and speciation using rotifers as a model system. The phylogenetic variation in the mate recognition pheromone gene can now be studied in conjunction with the large amount of ecological and population genetic data being gathered for the Brachionus plicatilis species complex to understand better the evolutionary drivers of cryptic speciation.

Highlights

  • Mate choice is of central importance to most animals, influencing population structure, speciation, and the survival of a species

  • Two decades ago the biochemical properties of surface glycoproteins involved in rotifer mate recognition were probed in binding studies with several fluorescently labeled lectins, which bind the carbohydrate moiety of the mate recognition pheromone (MRP) protein [12,33]

  • Characteristics of the MRP gene Using the N-terminal sequence of the 29 kD protein, we identified two contigs from a cDNA library of B. manjavacas as candidates for the MRP gene

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Summary

Introduction

Mate choice is of central importance to most animals, influencing population structure, speciation, and the survival of a species. Mating behavior of male brachionid rotifers is triggered by the product of a chemosensory gene, a glycoprotein on the body surface of females called the mate recognition pheromone. The mate recognition pheromone has been biochemically characterized, but little was known about the gene(s). One of the most important decisions in the life of animals is mate choice, which includes discrimination of conspecifics, avoidance of inbreeding, and identification of disease-free, high fitness genotypes. Pheromones are used to communicate information about the sex, age, and fitness of potential mates [1], and a wide variety of molecules are used to regulate life history transitions [2]. Recent work has elucidated some chemosensory genes involved in mate choice and how genetic variation in sensory genes influences mate discrimination. Reproductive genes often are rapidly evolving and exhibit the signature of positive selection [4]

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