| Literature DB >> 30404617 |
Kenneth G Ross1, DeWayne Shoemaker2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Sb supergene in the fire ant Solenopsis invicta determines the form of colony social organization, with colonies whose inhabitants bear the element containing multiple reproductive queens and colonies lacking it containing only a single queen. Several features of this supergene - including suppressed recombination, presence of deleterious mutations, association with a large centromere, and "green-beard" behavior - suggest that it may be a selfish genetic element that engages in transmission ratio distortion (TRD), defined as significant departures in progeny allele frequencies from Mendelian inheritance ratios. We tested this possibility by surveying segregation ratios in embryo progenies of 101 queens of the "polygyne" social form (3512 embryos) using three supergene-linked markers and twelve markers outside the supergene.Entities:
Keywords: Colony social organization; Meiotic drive; Segregation distortion; Selfish genetic element; Supergene; Transmission ratio distortion
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30404617 PMCID: PMC6223060 DOI: 10.1186/s12863-018-0685-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genet ISSN: 1471-2156 Impact factor: 2.797
Study sample sizes and summary data on transmission ratio distortion (TRD) in polygyne Solenopsis invicta.
| Sample sizes | |||||
| Number of nests from which polygyne study queens | 12 | ||||
| Number of queens genotyped | 113 | ||||
| Number of queens producing study progeniesa | 101 (8.4 ± 1.7, 4–11) | ||||
| Number of loci genotyped in queens / progenies | 15 | ||||
| Mean number of progenies genotyped per locusb | 93.1 (40–101) | ||||
| Number of embryos with DNA extracted | 3621 | ||||
| Number of embryos successfully genotyped | 3512 | ||||
| Number of presumed non-embryonated eggsc | 109 (0.030) | ||||
| Number of embryos genotyped per progenyd | Locus | Mean no. | |||
|
| 32.7 | ||||
|
| 32.6 | ||||
|
| 32.1 | ||||
|
| 32.3 | ||||
|
| 31.7 | ||||
|
| 34.5 | ||||
|
| 33.6 | ||||
|
| 32.6 | ||||
|
| 31.9 | ||||
|
| 33.1 | ||||
|
| 30.8 | ||||
|
| 34.0 | ||||
|
| 32.9 | ||||
|
| 32.5 | ||||
|
| 33.9 | ||||
| Summary TRD data | |||||
| Locuse | Number of segregating progeniesf | Number of embryos genotyped in segregating progeniesg | Mean | Proportion of segregating progenies with | Proportion of segregating progenies with |
|
| 12 (0.30) | 417 (34.8) | 0.568 (0.549–0.589) | 0.000 | 0.000 (−)k |
|
| 35 (0.36) | 1153 (32.9) | 0.558 (0.547–0.571) | 0.000 | 0.000 (0.026, 0.000)l |
|
| 80 (0.81) | 2578 (32.2) | 0.564 (0.555–0.573) | 0.038 | 0.025 (0.025, 0.000) |
|
| 77 (0.77) | 2542 (33.0) | 0.566 (0.555–0.577) | 0.065 | 0.039 (0.040, 0.000) |
|
| 72 (0.71) | 2344 (32.6) | 0.565 (0.556–0.576) | 0.056 | 0.042 (0.044, 0.000) |
|
| 50 (0.50) | 1700 (34.0) | 0.581 (0.566–0.597) | 0.100 | 0.060 (0.063, 0.000) |
|
| 65 (0.70) | 2065 (31.8) | 0.568 (0.555–0.582) | 0.062 | 0.062 (0.063, 0.000) |
|
| 81 (0.80) | 2712 (33.5) | 0.572 (0.560–0.585) | 0.074 | 0.074 (0.074, 0.000) |
|
| 74 (0.74) | 2392 (32.3) | 0.575 (0.563–0.587) | 0.122 | 0.081 (0.080, 0.000) |
|
| 76 (0.75) | 2464 (32.4) | 0.577 (0.565–0.590) | 0.092 | 0.092 (0.094, 0.000) |
|
| 67 (0.66) | 2180 (32.5) | 0.581 (0.568–0.595) | 0.134 | 0.104 (0.106, 0.034) |
|
| 29 (0.30) | 851 (29.3) | 0.579 (0.556–0.605) | 0.138 | 0.138 (0.140, 0.034) |
|
| 101 (1.0) | 3493 (34.6) | 0.584 (0.572–0.595) | 0.168 | 0.168 (0.166, |
|
| 61 (0.98) | 1955 (32.0) | 0.589 (0.572–0.607) | 0.197 | 0.180 (0.182, |
|
| 85 (0.84) | 2808 (33.0) | 0.590 (0.575–0.605) | 0.235 | 0.200 (0.205, |
The term “progeny” is used to refer to a group of diploid embryos that are the offspring of a single mated polygyne queen (i.e., a family of diploid siblings). Three of the15 loci studied are located within the Sb supergene (see Additional file 4: Table S2 for genomic coordinates of all loci); these supergene loci are highlighted in bold font
aThese queens are a subset of the total 113 queens genotyped. Mean numbers of queens originating from each nest (±standard deviation and range) are in parentheses
bRanges in parentheses
cNon-embryonated eggs fail to undergo embryogenesis and may serve a trophic function. Non- embryonated eggs as a proportion of total eggs studied is in parentheses
dExcludes complete genotyping failures in a progeny; loci are listed in alphabetical order
eLoci are arranged from lowest to highest proportions of segregating progenies that feature k significantly > 0.5 (binomial test)
fSegregating progenies as proportions of total progenies genotyped are in parentheses
gMean number of embryos genotyped per segregating progeny are in parentheses
hIn this table, the parameter k is the proportion of gametes in segregating progenies carrying an allele present at frequencies >0.5 (unpolarized k). The mean as well as the two-tail 95% confidence intervals (in parentheses) are based on 1000 bootstrap replicates
iFor the mean sample sizes of 32-33 embryos genotyped per segregating locus in this study, k=0.65 is a threshold above which segregation ratios generally depart significantly from 1:1 according to one-tailed exact binomial tests
jObserved proportions based on exact binomial tests; bootstrap/rarefaction estimates of the observed proportions, along with their lower one-tailed 95% confidence limits, are shown respectively in parentheses. Confidence limits greater than 0.05 (bold font) indicate significant TRD at a locus
kNumber of segregating progenies was too low to conduct bootstrap analyses
lBootstrap estimates assume that the next progeny sampled would have yielded a k value significantly > 0.05
Fig. 1Estimates of recombination frequencies (c) between pairs of marker loci. Triangles represent the mean values for jointly segregating embryo (egg) progenies, error bars represent the 95% confidence intervals (CIs), and circles represent the minimum and maximum values. White symbols represent locus pairs with c values significantly < 0.5
Fig. 2Departures from Mendelian (1:1) segregation ratios in progeny embryos at 15 marker loci. a Observed proportions of progenies with significant non-Mendelian ratios (k > 0.5, one-tailed exact binomial tests, p < 0.05) at each locus. Blue-shaded bars represent the three supergene-associated loci; the hatched bar represents the proportion of departures based on simultaneous consideration of all three supergene-associated loci. The dotted line represents the mean proportion across the remaining twelve (non-supergene) loci (6.0%). Error bars for the observed departures represent the one-tailed lower 95% confidence limits derived from bootstrap/rarefaction analyses (Additional file 6: Text S2); bars that do not extend below 0.05 signify significant TRD for that locus. Inset―Observed proportions of progenies with k ≥ 0.65 (the threshold above which segregation ratios generally depart significantly from 1:1 with our sample sizes). Loci are arranged in the order: red_ant, C27, C536, i_114, Sol-42f, i_109, cassidy, Sol-49, i_129, i_120, sunrise, Bertha, Gp-9, C294, and i_126; supergene loci are represented by blue-shaded bars. b Boxplots depicting segregation proportions (k) for each segregating progeny at each locus; k values (unpolarized) represent the more common gamete allele in each such progeny in this graph. The boxes depict the interquartile ranges, with black horizontal lines representing the median and red lines the mean for each locus. Individual progenies with significant non-Mendelian ratios (binomial tests, p < 0.05) are indicated by the larger yellow circles. Supergene loci are represented by boxes shaded blue; loci in this graph are arranged from low to high mean k values
Fig. 3Observed and simulated expected distributions of progeny segregation proportions (k) at three supergene-associated loci. The expected values were generated by a simulation model that takes into account specific sample sizes and assumes that departures from Mendelian segregation ratios arise by chance. The segregation proportions (polarized k) refer to the supergene-linked alleles C294, Gp-9, and, for locus i_126, the specific allele on the supergene in each progeny (i_126 in 60 of 85 [70.6%] segregating progenies). Hatching indicates proportions of progenies with observed k values that depart significantly from Mendelian ratios based on the binomial probabilities. Values on the x-axis denote bin maximum values of k
Fig. 4Observed and simulated expected distributions of progenies with non-Mendelian segregation proportions of the Sb supergene. The distributions of expected numbers were generated by simulation models that simultaneously considered all three supergene-linked loci and accounted for specific sample sizes. The models assume that departures from Mendelian (1:1) segregation ratios arise solely by chance, with one model incorporating correlations between marker segregation ratios (black bars), and the other, more conservative model disregarding this non-independence (gray bars). Small arrows show the mean numbers of expected progenies from 1000 iterations of each model, whereas the large arrow shows the observed proportion of non-Mendelian progenies