| Literature DB >> 26619284 |
Michael A Najarro1, Jennifer L Hackett1, Brittny R Smith1, Chad A Highfill1, Elizabeth G King2, Anthony D Long3, Stuart J Macdonald1,4.
Abstract
Natural populations exhibit a great deal of interindividual genetic variation in the response to toxins, exemplified by the variable clinical efficacy of pharmaceutical drugs in humans, and the evolution of pesticide resistant insects. Such variation can result from several phenomena, including variable metabolic detoxification of the xenobiotic, and differential sensitivity of the molecular target of the toxin. Our goal is to genetically dissect variation in the response to xenobiotics, and characterize naturally-segregating polymorphisms that modulate toxicity. Here, we use the Drosophila Synthetic Population Resource (DSPR), a multiparent advanced intercross panel of recombinant inbred lines, to identify QTL (Quantitative Trait Loci) underlying xenobiotic resistance, and employ caffeine as a model toxic compound. Phenotyping over 1,700 genotypes led to the identification of ten QTL, each explaining 4.5-14.4% of the broad-sense heritability for caffeine resistance. Four QTL harbor members of the cytochrome P450 family of detoxification enzymes, which represent strong a priori candidate genes. The case is especially strong for Cyp12d1, with multiple lines of evidence indicating the gene causally impacts caffeine resistance. Cyp12d1 is implicated by QTL mapped in both panels of DSPR RILs, is significantly upregulated in the presence of caffeine, and RNAi knockdown robustly decreases caffeine tolerance. Furthermore, copy number variation at Cyp12d1 is strongly associated with phenotype in the DSPR, with a trend in the same direction observed in the DGRP (Drosophila Genetic Reference Panel). No additional plausible causative polymorphisms were observed in a full genomewide association study in the DGRP, or in analyses restricted to QTL regions mapped in the DSPR. Just as in human populations, replicating modest-effect, naturally-segregating causative variants in an association study framework in flies will likely require very large sample sizes.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26619284 PMCID: PMC4664282 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1005663
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Genet ISSN: 1553-7390 Impact factor: 5.917
Fig 1Genome scan for caffeine resistance QTL.
Scans for population pA and pB are shown in blue and red curves, respectively, and the horizontal dotted lines represent population-specific genomewide 5% permutation thresholds (pA, LOD = 8.1; pB, LOD = 7.4). Genetic distances along the chromosomes are indicated along the x-axis. The centromeres are at positions 54 and 47 on chromosomes 2 and 3, respectively. The positions of the ten QTL we describe in the text are indicated on the plot for ease of reference. Intervals implicated by these QTL are highlighted as vertical bars, with pA-specific QTL in light blue, pB-specific QTL in pink, and QTL identified in both panels in yellow.
Details of mapped caffeine resistance QTL.
| Name (Chr) | Panel | LOD score | Peak cM (2-LOD CI) | Peak Mb (2-LOD CI) | Number of genes | Percent of |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Q1 ( | pA | 9.9 | 53.3 (53.1–53.6) | 18.74 (18.22–19.26) | 123 | 5.5 |
| pB | 14.0 | 53.2 (52.8–53.3) | 18.52 (17.65–18.72) | 81 | 7.7 | |
| Q2 ( | pA | 27.2 | 63.6 (63.3–63.8) | 7.07 (6.90–7.16) | 36 | 14.4 |
| pB | 10.3 | 63.6 (62.9–64.3) | 7.06 (6.68–7.43) | 122 | 5.7 | |
| Q3 ( | pA | 11.3 | 66.1 (65.8–66.3) | 8.36 (8.21–8.49) | 65 | 6.3 |
| pB | 10.6 | 66.3 (66.2–66.8) | 8.49 (8.43–8.74) | 48 | 5.9 | |
| Q4 ( | pB | 8.1 | 68.8 (68.5–69.2) | 9.65 (9.54–9.81) | 26 | 4.5 |
| Q5 ( | pB | 9.8 | 75.2 (73.6–76.3) | 11.49 (11.11–11.76) | 68 | 5.4 |
| Q6 ( | pB | 9.1 | 83.9 (82.9–84.1) | 13.77 (13.46–13.83) | 69 | 5.1 |
| Q7 ( | pB | 9.1 | 88.1 (87.5–89.0) | 15.23 (15.02–15.58) | 74 | 5.0 |
| Q8 ( | pB | 10.4 | 46.4 (46.0–47.1) | 20.56 (19.89–24.36) | 398 | 5.8 |
| Q9 ( | pA | 10.2 | 54.4 (54.1–55.2) | 9.87 (9.73–10.41) | 79 | 5.7 |
| Q10 ( | pB | 9.1 | 62.5 (62.4–63.4) | 14.01 (13.98–14.36) | 61 | 5.1 |
a 2-LOD CI indicates the 2-LOD support interval of the QTL. Physical positions are given based on release 5 of the Drosophila reference genome.
b The number of protein-coding genes in the 2-LOD support interval.
c The proportion of the phenotypic variance due to each QTL comes directly from the linear model used for mapping (page 77 of [76]). The percentage of the broad-sense heritability (H 2) is simply this estimate divided by the broad-sense heritability of the mean measure of caffeine resistance.
Fig 2Founder haplotype means and 1-SDs for the three QTL mapped in both panels of DSPR RILs.
Means are presented for both pA (light gray bars) and pB (dark gray bars), and the number of RILs for which we assign a founder genotype (probability > 0.95) is listed at the bottom of each bar. Only founder means associated with at least 5 observations are presented. Since line AB8 was used to found both synthetic populations, and the haplotype mean was independently estimated from pA and pB RILs, the line is presented twice in each plot.
Differential expression of genes beneath QTL mapped in pA.
| FPKM | Fold change | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| QTL | Gene | Low (Con) | High (Con) | Low (Caff) | High (Caff) | Low | Low | Con | Con |
| Q2 |
| 18.8 | 13.3 | 4.9 | 2.5 | −0.51 | −0.98 | −1.94 | −2.41 |
| Q2 |
| 26.3 | 102.3 | 293.3 | 700.8 | 1.96 | 1.26 | 3.48 | 2.78 |
| Q3 |
| 80.3 | 90.5 | 29.7 | 38.6 | 0.17 | 0.37 | −1.43 | −1.23 |
| Q3 |
| 1.2 | 0.7 | 0.2 | 0.2 | −0.82 | 0.18 | −2.94 | −1.94 |
| Q3 |
| 37.7 | 77.6 | 25.1 | 50.6 | 1.04 | 1.01 | −0.58 | −0.62 |
| Q9 |
| 34.6 | 39.0 | 16.4 | 22.3 | 0.17 | 0.45 | −1.08 | −0.80 |
| Q9 |
| 85.3 | 175.8 | 737.3 | 768.4 | 1.04 | 0.06 | 3.11 | 2.13 |
a Fragments Per Kilobase of transcript per Million mapped reads (values from Cuffdiff output files) for each of the four line/treatment combinations (Con = control food, Caff = caffeine food).
b The log2 fold change (second sample divided by first sample) in gene expression for each of the four contrasts.
** indicates the test survives a per-contrast FDR of 5% (i.e., q < 0.05).
* indicates the test is significant at p < 0.05. No asterisk indicates the test is not significant at a nominal 5% level.
c These genes are also within the Q2 interval mapped in pB.
d These genes are not within the Q3 interval mapped in pB.
e This is the expression measured at the annotated Cyp12d1-p gene, with the annotation for the nearly identical gene Cyp12d1-d removed from the reference prior to RNAseq analysis. Similar results are seen using the Cyp12d1-d annotation, and masking the Cyp12d1-p gene.
Fig 3Effects of single gene RNAi knockdown experiments.
Gal4-UAS-RNAi female progeny of several genotypes were tested in our caffeine resistance assay against control strains ("Con"). The genes tested were Cyp12d1-d and Cyp12d1-d under QTL Q2, Cyp301a1 under Q3, and Cyp6d5 and under Q9. Each bar represents the mean lifespan (± 1-SD) in the assay across a number of genetically-identical individuals (sample size is in the bottom right corner of each bar), and asterisks represent the significance of Welch's t-test comparing each RNAi genotype to its respective control (ns = not significant, *p < 0.01, **p < 0.001, ***p < 10−10). (A) Driving Gal4 using a ubiquitous promoter with KK-UAS lines. Left-to-right the VDRC stock numbers of the test genotypes are 60100, 109248, 109256, 109771, and 107641. (B) Driving Gal4 using a ubiquitous promoter with GD-UAS lines. Left-to-right the VDRC stock numbers of the test genotypes are 60000, 50507, 21235, and 49269. (C and D) Driving Gal4 ubiquitously in adults using an RU486-inducible promoter in two independent trials, the first (C) with flies on RU486 for 24 hours prior to the assay and throughout, and the second (D) with flies on RU486 for 48 hours prior to the assay and throughout. Genotypes tested are the same as those depicted in (A).