| Literature DB >> 25751626 |
Hideki Nishikawa1, Takuro Iijima1, Rei Kajitani2, Junichi Yamaguchi1, Toshiya Ando3, Yutaka Suzuki4, Sumio Sugano5, Asao Fujiyama6, Shunichi Kosugi7, Hideki Hirakawa7, Satoshi Tabata7, Katsuhisa Ozaki8, Hiroya Morimoto2, Kunio Ihara9, Madoka Obara9, Hiroshi Hori9, Takehiko Itoh2, Haruhiko Fujiwara1.
Abstract
In Batesian mimicry, animals avoid predation by resembling distasteful models. In the swallowtail butterfly Papilio polytes, only mimetic-form females resemble the unpalatable butterfly Pachliopta aristolochiae. A recent report showed that a single gene, doublesex (dsx), controls this mimicry; however, the detailed molecular mechanisms remain unclear. Here we determined two whole-genome sequences of P. polytes and a related species, Papilio xuthus, identifying a single ∼130-kb autosomal inversion, including dsx, between mimetic (H-type) and non-mimetic (h-type) chromosomes in P. polytes. This inversion is associated with the mimicry-related locus H, as identified by linkage mapping. Knockdown experiments demonstrated that female-specific dsx isoforms expressed from the inverted H allele (dsx(H)) induce mimetic coloration patterns and simultaneously repress non-mimetic patterns. In contrast, dsx(h) does not alter mimetic patterns. We propose that dsx(H) switches the coloration of predetermined wing patterns and that female-limited polymorphism is tightly maintained by chromosomal inversion.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25751626 DOI: 10.1038/ng.3241
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Genet ISSN: 1061-4036 Impact factor: 38.330