| Literature DB >> 23431497 |
Matthew E B Hansen1, Rob J Kulathinal.
Abstract
Sexual antagonism, or conflict, can occur when males and females harbor opposing reproductive strategies. The large fraction of sex-biased genes in genomes present considerable opportunities for conflict to occur, suggesting that sexual antagonism may potentially be a general phenomenon at the molecular level. Here, we employ a novel strategy to identify potential nodes of sexual conflict in Drosophila melanogaster by coupling male, female, and sex-unbiased networks derived from genome-wide expression data with available genetic and protein interaction data. We find that sex-biased networks comprise a large fraction (~1/3) of the total interaction network with the male network possessing nearly twice the number of nodes (genes) relative to the female network. However, there are far less edges or interaction partners among male relative to female subnetworks as seen in their power law distributions. We further identified 598 sex-unbiased genes that can act as indirect nodes of interlocus sexual conflict as well as 271 direct nodal pairs of potential conflict between male- and female-biased genes. The pervasiveness of such potentially conflicting nodes may explain the rapid evolution of sex-biased as well as non-sex-biased genes via this molecular mechanism of sexual selection even among taxa such as Drosophila that are nominally sexually dimorphic.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23431497 PMCID: PMC3566611 DOI: 10.1155/2013/545392
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Evol Biol ISSN: 2090-052X
| FRIEDMANPERRIMON_COAP.txt | RNA_GENE.txt |
| CURAGEN_YTH.txt | FLY_GENETIC_INTERACTIONS.txt |
| HYBRIGENICS_YTH.txt | F LY_GENE_ATTR.txt |
| DPIM_COAPCOMPLEX.txt | HUMAN_INTEROLOGS.txt |
| FLY_OTHER_PHYSICAL.txt | YEAST_INTEROLOGS.txt |
| TF_GENE.txt | WORM INTEROLOGS.txt |
| confidence_correlation.txt |
Characteristics of sex-biased and unbiased networks. Each of the sex-unbiased, male-, and female-biased networks are classified into subnetworks by the expression bias of the interacting nodes. The letter codes A, U, F, and M refer to the node types “All”, “Unbiased”, “Female-biased”, and “Male-biased”, respectively. The number of nodes and the number of edges refer to first letter (boldface) of the network type. For example, the pair X-Y refers to all nodes of type X that have an edge to a node of type Y. The summary statistics reported are: (1) the total number of nodes (of boldface type), (2) the total number of unique edges connecting those nodes, (3) the overall ratio of edges per node, computed by dividing the second column by the first column, (4) the mean number of edges per node, (5) the standard deviation in the number of edges per node about the mean, (6) the 25th percentile of the number of edges per node, (7) the 75th percentile of the number of edges per node, (8) the exponent of the best fit power law to the degree distribution, and (9) the degree lower limit cutoff for a node to be included in the power law fit. Reported values are for the strict DroID network that only include interactions based on physical, experimental evidence; values in parenthesis refer to the permissive network that include all evidence types in the DroID database version “2012_04”. The power law exponent is fit to the tail of the edges per node binned distribution (bin size = 5); edge per node values below the cutoff indicated in the last column are not used in the power law fit.
| Network | Nodes | Edges | Edges/nodes | Mean edges/node | StD edges/node | 25th% | 75th% | Exponent | Cutoff |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 12,453 (12,628) | 237,954 (403,518) | 19.1 (32.0) | 38.1 (63.7) | 235.0 (244.7) | 6 (9) | 31 (59) | −2.77 (−2.13) | 25 (25) |
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| 8,432 (8,517) | 219,401 (370,642) | 26.0 (43.5) | 39.2 (65.6) | 233.9 (244.1) | 7 (11) | 33 (61) | −2.79 (−2.17) | 25 (25) |
|
| 8,302 (8,429) | 124,730 (214,508) | 15.0 (25.4) | 36.6 (61.3) | 219.9 (229.3) | 6 (10) | 30 (57) | −2.80 (−2.19) | 25 (25) |
|
| 7,378 (7,680) | 68,794 (108,317) | 9.3 (14.1) | 31.1 (51.6) | 197.5 (206.0) | 5 (7) | 26 (47) | −3.13 (−2.46) | 5 (5) |
|
| 6,024 (6,802) | 25,877 (47,817) | 4.3 (7.0) | 27.3 (44.7) | 183.5 (190.3) | 3 (5) | 24 (40) | −2.61 (−2.66) | 5 (5) |
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| 1,446 (1,452) | 85,430 (137,027) | 59.0 (94.4) | 28.6 (46.7) | 192.8 (199.4) | 3 (5) | 25 (41) | −2.59 (−1.54) | 25 (25) |
|
| 1,430 (1,440) | 68,794 (108,317) | 48.1 (75.2) | 29.2 (47.5) | 196.5 (202.9) | 3 (5) | 25 (42) | −2.67 (−1.73) | 20 (20) |
|
| 1,348 (1,365) | 9,270 (16,956) | 6.9 (12.4) | 28.7 (46.9) | 193.9 (200.3) | 4 (5) | 24 (41) | −3.01 (−1.92) | 10 (10) |
|
| 1,127 (1,244) | 7,366 (11,754) | 6.5 (9.4) | 28.2 (45.9) | 191.7 (198.0) | 3 (5) | 24 (40) | −2.09 (−2.23) | 5 (5) |
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| 2,575 (2,659) | 35,160 (63,737) | 13.7 (24.0) | 27.5 (44.9) | 188.3 (194.7) | 3 (4) | 23 (39) | −2.55 (−1.79) | 15 (15) |
|
| 2,423 (2,547) | 25,877 (47,817) | 10.7 (18.8) | 26.7 (43.7) | 184.8 (191.2) | 3 (4) | 23 (38) | −2.83 (−1.98) | 15 (15) |
|
| 1,622 (1,832) | 7,366 (11,754) | 4.5 (6.4) | 26.1 (42.5) | 182.1 (188.2) | 3 (4) | 22 (37) | −2.90 (−2.42) | 5 (5) |
|
| 1,327 (1,636) | 1,917 (4,166) | 1.4 (2.5) | 25.5 (41.4) | 180.0 (185.7) | 3 (4) | 22 (36) | −2.75 (−2.18) | 5 (5) |
Figure 1Frequency distribution of the number of edges per node for various classes of interactions. A log-log plot of the edges per node bin counts is shown for four (sub)networks, as indicated in the legend. The bin size is 5, and the bin counts are unnormalized. All interactions from the entire network (black) and those among the sex-unbiased node subnetwork (brown) display power law tails for degree above: 25. The female subnetwork (red) has a power law tail for degree above: 5, while the male subnetwork (blue) is approximately a power law in its entirety. Only the male subnetwork displays a monotonic distribution.
Figure 2Identifying potential nodes of interlocus sexual conflict from male and female gene networks. Genes (nodes) are classified as male-biased (blue), female-biased (red), and sex-unbiased (open) according to their relative expression levels in each of the sexes. (a) Unbiased genes that are connected to both male- and female-biased genes are potential “indirect” nodes of interest for sexual antagonism at that locus. In other words, indirect sexual conflict can occur in sex-unbiased genes that have edges to both male biased and female biased genes. (b) A sex-biased gene directly connected to a biased gene from the opposite sex provides potential “direct” nodes of interest for sexual antagonism at that locus. In other words, direct sexual conflict can occur on male-biased genes that directly interact with female-biased genes, and vice versa.
Significant gene ontology (GO) categories for sex-unbiased nodes that interact with at least one male-biased gene and at least one female-biased gene (indirect nodes of sexual conflict). Interactions using the strict criterion were used and only significant (Bonferroni corrected P-values ≤0.05) gene ontology classes (Biological Process “Fat” as computed in DAVID) that contain at least 10% of the gene set, are listed.
| Rank | Gene ontology function (BP) | Gene ontology ID |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Post-embryonic morphogenesis | GO: 0009886 |
| 2 | Imaginal disc development | GO: 0007444 |
| 3 | metamorphosis | GO: 0007552 |
| 4 | Pattern specification process | GO: 0009653 |
| 5 | Post-embryonic development | GO: 0009791 |
| 6 | Regulation of RNA metabolic process | GO: 0009887 |
| 7 | Instar larval or pupal development | GO:0002165 |
| 8 | Regionalization | GO: 0003002 |
| 9 | Regulation of transcription, DNA-dependent | GO: 0006355 |
| 10 | Regulation of transcription | GO: 0045449 |
| 11 | Reproductive cellular process | GO: 0048610 |
| 12 | Gamete generation | GO: 0007276 |
| 13 | Sexual reproduction | GO: 0019953 |
| 14 | Reproductive process in a multicellular organism | GO: 0048609 |
| 15 | Multicellular organism reproduction | GO: 0032504 |
Significant gene ontology (GO) categories for female-biased genes that interact directly with male-biased genes (direct nodes of sexual conflict). Interactions using the strict criterion were used and only significant (Bonferroni corrected P values ≤0.05) gene ontology classes (Biological Process “Fat” as computed in DAVID) that contain at least 10% of the gene set, are listed. Male-biased nodes of direct conflict did not harbor any significant GO terms.
| Rank | Gene ontology function (BP) | Gene ontology ID |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Notch signaling pathway | GO: 0007219 |
| 2 | Sexual reproduction | GO: 0019953 |
| 3 | Female gamete generation | GO: 0007292 |
| 4 | Reproductive cellular process | GO: 0048610 |
| 5 | Gamete generation | GO: 0007276 |
| 6 | Reproductive process in a multicellular organism | GO: 0048609 |
| 7 | Multicellular organism reproduction | GO: 0032504 |
| 8 | Cell fate commitment | GO: 0045165 |
| 9 | Cell fate specification | GO: 0001708 |
| 10 | Sensory organ development | GO: 0007423 |
| 11 | Oogenesis | GO: 0048477 |
| 12 | Cell fate determination | GO: 0001709 |
| 13 | Reproductive developmental process | GO: 0003006 |