| Literature DB >> 29202686 |
B Feldmeyer1, D Elsner2, A Alleman3, S Foitzik3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The transition to a parasitic lifestyle entails comprehensive changes to the selective regime. In parasites, genes encoding for traits that facilitate host detection, exploitation and transmission should be under selection. Slavemaking ants are social parasites that exploit the altruistic behaviour of their hosts by stealing heterospecific host brood during raids, which afterwards serve as slaves in slavemaker nests. Here we search for evidence of selection in the transcriptomes of three slavemaker species and three closely related hosts. We expected selection on genes underlying recognition and raiding or defense behaviour. Analyses of selective forces in species with a slavemaker or host lifestyle allowed investigation into whether or not repeated instances of slavemaker evolution share the same genetic basis. To investigate the genetic basis of host-slavemaker co-evolution, we created orthologous clusters from transcriptome sequences of six Temnothorax ant species - three slavemakers and three hosts - to identify genes with signatures of selection. We further tested for functional enrichment in selected genes from slavemakers and hosts respectively and investigated which pathways the according genes belong to.Entities:
Keywords: Co-evolution; Positive selection; Social parasites; Temnothorax
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29202686 PMCID: PMC5715652 DOI: 10.1186/s12862-017-1078-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Evol Biol ISSN: 1471-2148 Impact factor: 3.260
Fig. 1RAxML obtained Maximum Likelihood phylogenetic relationship of the six slavemaker and host species with Acromyrmex echinatior as outgroup, and based on 5199 ortholog gene-clusters (ML bootstrap percentages depicted at nodes). Slavemaker species names are given in red, host species names in black. Arrows connect slavemaker-host species pairs
Fig. 2Venn diagrams depicting the number of shared and “private” positive selected genes (a + b) and corresponding pathways (c + d) in slavemakers and hosts. (T. dul = T. duloticus, T. ameri = T. americanus, T. pila = T. pilagens, T. curvi = T. curvispinosus, T. longi = T. longispinosus, T. ambi = T. ambiguus)
List of genes which emerged as candidates in this study (signatures of positive selection), as well as an accompanying study contrasting gene expression patterns during a raid versus no raid behaviours [64]
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| hypothetical protein G5I_08161 | Trypsin-7 | Leukotriene A-4 hydrolase |
| hypothetical protein SINV_10379 | Suppressor of tumorgenicity protein 14 | |
| Trypsin-7 | ||
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| hypothetical protein SINV_06866 | Putative inorganic phosphate cotransporter | Putative inorganic phosphate cotransporter |
| hypothetical protein SINV_03497 | Paired amphipathic helix protein Sin3a | Aminopeptidase N |
| Alpha-catulin | Zinc transporter ZIP1 | RING finger protein 17 |
| Thyrotropin-releasing hormone-degrading ectoenzyme | Uncharacterized protein | Sugar transporter ERD6-like 7 |
| hypothetical protein SINV_12600 | hypothetical protein SINV_09653 | Matrix metalloproteinase-14 |
| Pleckstrin-like protein domain-containing family M member 2 | Kelch-like protein 10 | hypothetical protein G5I_08549 |
| F-box/LRR-repeat protein 20 | Fatty acyl-CoA reductase 1 | Receptor-type tyrosine-protein phosphatase beta |
| hypothetical protein SINV_03929 | hypothetical protein EAI_01741 | hypothetical protein SINV_02546 |
| Major facilitator superfamily domain-containing protein 6 | Cytochrome b5 | |
| Sphingomyelin phosphodiesterase | hypothetical protein SINV_09234 | |
| Zinc finger protein jing-like protein | hypothetical protein G5I_14818 | |
| Elongation of very long chain fatty acids protein | Putative ATP-dependent RNA helicase DDX23 | |
| Circadian clock-controlled protein | Trypsin-7 | |
| hypothetical protein SINV_04023 | Circadian clock-controlled protein |
Fig. 3Venn diagrams depicting shared and “private” selected genes (a-c) and pathways (d-f) between host and slavemakers species pairs. For species name abbreviations please refer to Fig. 2