| Literature DB >> 31740605 |
Duane D McKenna1,2, Seunggwan Shin3,2, Dirk Ahrens4, Michael Balke5, Cristian Beza-Beza3,2, Dave J Clarke3,2, Alexander Donath6, Hermes E Escalona6,7,8, Frank Friedrich9, Harald Letsch10, Shanlin Liu11, David Maddison12, Christoph Mayer6, Bernhard Misof6, Peyton J Murin3, Oliver Niehuis8, Ralph S Peters4, Lars Podsiadlowski6, Hans Pohl13, Erin D Scully14, Evgeny V Yan13,15, Xin Zhou16, Adam Ślipiński7, Rolf G Beutel13.
Abstract
The order Coleoptera (beetles) is arguably the most speciose group of animals, but the evolutionary history of beetles, including the impacts of plant feeding (herbivory) on beetle diversification, remain poorly understood. We inferred the phylogeny of beetles using 4,818 genes for 146 species, estimated timing and rates of beetle diversification using 89 genes for 521 species representing all major lineages and traced the evolution of beetle genes enabling symbiont-independent digestion of lignocellulose using 154 genomes or transcriptomes. Phylogenomic analyses of these uniquely comprehensive datasets resolved previously controversial beetle relationships, dated the origin of Coleoptera to the Carboniferous, and supported the codiversification of beetles and angiosperms. Moreover, plant cell wall-degrading enzymes (PCWDEs) obtained from bacteria and fungi via horizontal gene transfers may have been key to the Mesozoic diversification of herbivorous beetles-remarkably, both major independent origins of specialized herbivory in beetles coincide with the first appearances of an arsenal of PCWDEs encoded in their genomes. Furthermore, corresponding (Jurassic) diversification rate increases suggest that these novel genes triggered adaptive radiations that resulted in nearly half of all living beetle species. We propose that PCWDEs enabled efficient digestion of plant tissues, including lignocellulose in cell walls, facilitating the evolution of uniquely specialized plant-feeding habits, such as leaf mining and stem and wood boring. Beetle diversity thus appears to have resulted from multiple factors, including low extinction rates over a long evolutionary history, codiversification with angiosperms, and adaptive radiations of specialized herbivorous beetles following convergent horizontal transfers of microbial genes encoding PCWDEs.Entities:
Keywords: adaptive radiation; herbivory; horizontal gene transfer; microbes; phylogeny
Year: 2019 PMID: 31740605 PMCID: PMC6900523 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1909655116
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205
Fig. 1.A dated phylogeny of beetles showing the distribution of putative PCWDEs, inferred from 4,818 nuclear genes ( and ). Branches in suborder Polyphaga are color-coded by superfamily. Numbers indicate nodes constrained by fossil priors (). Filled squares indicate the presence of putative PCWDEs and GH32 invertases (color-coded by gene family) based on analyses of whole-genome (asterisk) or RNA-Seq data. GH1 and GH9 have known ancient origins in metazoans (14, 47) and were expected to occur in most species. Asterisks denote results from the analysis of WGS (versus RNA-Seq) data. Numbers of homologs are indicated in each box when previously published (). Note that Rhinorhipus was added after the initial analyses were completed based on a new ML tree search, which recovered the same topology. Bootstrapping was not conducted due to computational constraints. However, its placement was the same in the 521-taxon tree, where it had 100% ML bootstrap support. All higher taxa shown to illustrate morphological diversity (but not all species) were sampled. Cupes image courtesy of Matthew Bertone (North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC). All other photos courtesy of Udo Schmidt (photographer).
Fig. 2.Timing and rates of beetle diversification. Family-level net diversification rates and rate shifts for 188/190 beetle families (full tree; ). Branch colors indicate net diversification rates. Numbered circles indicate the locations of significant net diversification rate shifts (red/increases; blue/decreases). Approximate numbers of described extant species are indicated next to family-level taxon names (76). Note that the right column entries are interdigitated between the left ones, as connected by dashed lines. The beetle suborders and polyphagan beetle superfamilies are labeled on the right side of the tree. Outgroups are not shown. The timeline indicates mass extinctions and significant events in the history of seed plants (39, 77). Photos show select beetle groups that experienced significant diversification rate increases. Lixus image courtesy of D.D.M. Garretes image courtesy of Piotr Naskrecki (Harvard University, Cambridge, MA). Agrilus image courtesy of David Cappaert (photographer). All other photos courtesy of Alex Wild (photographer).
Fig. 3.Adaptive radiation of specialized herbivorous beetles after the acquisition of PCWDEs from microbes. (A) Summary of beetle time tree showing 2 major independent origins of novel PCWDEs from bacteria and fungi and coincident net diversification rate increases among specialized herbivorous beetles (green background; summarized from Figs. 1 and 2): 1) along the stem of Buprestidae (Buprestoidea) and 2) along the stem of Phytophaga (Chrysomeloidea + Curculionoidea). Colorized boxes indicate the presence of candidate PCWDEs. The number of beetle species sampled that contain at least one PCWDE gene family member is indicated in each box. Empty/white boxes indicate a gene family was not observed. Beetle diets: detritivory (D), mycophagy (M), predation (Pr), herbivory (H), and unknown (?). Most data were obtained from ref. 6 and are ordered by decreasing prevalence. Percent herbivores >1% is shown to the nearest 5% and was estimated based on our collective knowledge of these beetle groups. (B) Unrooted phylogenetic trees for PCWDE gene families illustrating the taxonomic origins of beetle-encoded genes ( and Datasets S1–S3). The beetle groups represented in each gene tree are labeled. Leptinotarsa image courtesy of the USDA Agricultural Research Service/Scott Bauer, licensed under CC BY 3.0.