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1.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Jan 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38260248

ABSTRACT

The development of complex phenotypes requires the coordinated action of many genes across space and time, yet many species have evolved the ability to develop multiple discrete, alternate phenotypes1-3. Such polymorphisms are often controlled by supergenes, sets of tightly-linked mutations in one or more loci that function together to produce a complex phenotype4. Although theories of supergene evolution are well-established, the mutations that cause functional differences between supergene alleles remain essentially unknown. doublesex is the master regulator of insect sexual differentiation but functions as a supergene in multiple Papilio swallowtail butterflies, where divergent dsx alleles control development of discrete non-mimetic or mimetic female wing color patterns5-7. Here we demonstrate that the functional elements of the mimetic allele in Papilio alphenor are six new cis-regulatory elements (CREs) spread across 150 kb that are bound by DSX itself. Our findings provide experimental support to classic supergene theory and suggest that the evolution of auto-regulation may provide a simple route to supergene origination and to the co-option of pleiotropic genes into new developmental roles.

2.
Mol Biol Evol ; 40(9)2023 09 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37668300

ABSTRACT

Novel phenotypes are increasingly recognized to have evolved by co-option of conserved genes into new developmental contexts, yet the process by which co-opted genes modify existing developmental programs remains obscure. Here, we provide insight into this process by characterizing the role of co-opted doublesex in butterfly wing color pattern development. dsx is the master regulator of insect sex differentiation but has been co-opted to control the switch between discrete nonmimetic and mimetic patterns in Papilio alphenor and its relatives through the evolution of novel mimetic alleles. We found dynamic spatial and temporal expression pattern differences between mimetic and nonmimetic butterflies throughout wing development. A mimetic color pattern program is switched on by a pulse of dsx expression in early pupal development that causes acute and long-term differential gene expression, particularly in Wnt and Hedgehog signaling pathways. RNAi suggested opposing, novel roles for these pathways in mimetic pattern development. Importantly, Dsx co-option caused Engrailed, a primary target of Hedgehog signaling, to gain a novel expression domain early in pupal wing development that is propagated through mid-pupal development to specify novel mimetic patterns despite becoming decoupled from Dsx expression itself. Altogether, our findings provide multiple views into how co-opted genes can both cause and elicit changes to conserved networks and pathways to result in development of novel, adaptive phenotypes.


Subject(s)
Butterflies , Hedgehog Proteins , Animals , Butterflies/genetics , Alleles , Heart Rate , Phenotype
3.
BMC Biol ; 21(1): 104, 2023 05 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37170114

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Gene duplication events are critical for the evolution of new gene functions. Aristaless is a major regulator of distinct developmental processes. It is most known for its role during appendage development across animals. However, more recently other distinct biological functions have been described for this gene and its duplicates. Butterflies and moths have two copies of aristaless, aristaless1 (al1) and aristaless2 (al2), as a result of a gene duplication event. Previous work in Heliconius has shown that both copies appear to have novel functions related to wing color patterning. Here we expand our knowledge of the expression profiles associated with both ancestral and novel functions of Al1 across embryogenesis and wing pigmentation. Furthermore, we characterize Al2 expression, providing a comparative framework between gene copies within the same species, allowing us to understand the origin of new functions following gene duplication. RESULTS: Our work shows that the expression of both Al1 and Al2 is associated with the ancestral function of sensory appendage (leg, mouth, spines, and eyes) development in embryos. Interestingly, Al1 exhibits higher expression earlier in embryogenesis while the highest levels of Al2 expression are shifted to later stages of embryonic development. Furthermore, Al1 localization appears extranuclear while Al2 co-localizes tightly with nuclei earlier, and then also expands outside the nucleus later in development. Cellular expression of Al1 and Al2 in pupal wings is broadly consistent with patterns observed during embryogenesis. We also describe, for the first time, how Al1 localization appears to correlate with zones of anterior/posterior elongation of the body during embryonic growth, showcasing a possible new function related to Aristaless' previously described role in appendage extension. CONCLUSIONS: Overall, our data suggest that while both gene copies play a role in embryogenesis and wing pigmentation, the duplicates have diverged temporally and mechanistically across those functions. Our study helps clarify principles behind sub-functionalization and gene expression evolution associated with developmental functions following gene duplication events.


Subject(s)
Butterflies , Animals , Butterflies/genetics , Pigmentation/genetics , Wings, Animal/metabolism
4.
BMC Biol ; 21(1): 100, 2023 05 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37143075

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Highly diverse butterfly wing patterns have emerged as a powerful system for understanding the genetic basis of phenotypic variation. While the genetic basis of this pattern variation is being clarified, the precise developmental pathways linking genotype to phenotype are not well understood. The gene aristaless, which plays a role in appendage patterning and extension, has been duplicated in Lepidoptera. One copy, aristaless1, has been shown to control a white/yellow color switch in the butterfly Heliconius cydno, suggesting a novel function associated with color patterning and pigmentation. Here we investigate the developmental basis of al1 in embryos, larvae, and pupae using new antibodies, CRISPR/Cas9, RNAi, qPCR assays of downstream targets, and pharmacological manipulation of an upstream activator. RESULTS: We find that Al1 is expressed at the distal tips of developing embryonic appendages consistent with its ancestral role. In developing wings, we observe Al1 accumulation within developing scale cells of white H. cydno during early pupation while yellow scale cells exhibit little Al1 at this time point. Reduced Al1 expression is also associated with yellow scale development in al1 knockouts and knockdowns. We propose that Al1 expression in future white scales might be related to an observed downregulation of the enzyme Cinnabar and other genes that synthesize and transport the yellow pigment, 3-hydroxykynurenine (3-OHK). Finally, we provide evidence that Al1 activation is under the control of Wnt signaling. CONCLUSIONS: We propose a model in which high levels of Al1 during early pupation, which are mediated by Wnt, are important for melanic pigmentation and specifying white portions of the wing while reduced levels of Al1 during early pupation promote upregulation of proteins needed to move and synthesize 3-OHK, promoting yellow pigmentation. In addition, we discuss how the ancestral role of aristaless in appendage extension may be relevant in understanding the cellular mechanism behind color patterning in the context of the heterochrony hypothesis.


Subject(s)
Butterflies , Lepidoptera , Animals , Pigmentation/genetics , Wings, Animal/metabolism , Butterflies/genetics , Color
5.
BMC Biol ; 18(1): 84, 2020 07 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32620168

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Heliconius butterflies are widely distributed across the Neotropics and have evolved a stunning array of wing color patterns that mediate Müllerian mimicry and mating behavior. Their rapid radiation has been strongly influenced by hybridization, which has created new species and allowed sharing of color patterning alleles between mimetic species pairs. While these processes have frequently been observed in widespread species with contiguous distributions, many Heliconius species inhabit patchy or rare habitats that may strongly influence the origin and spread of species and color patterns. Here, we assess the effects of historical population fragmentation and unique biology on the origins, genetic health, and color pattern evolution of two rare and sparsely distributed Brazilian butterflies, Heliconius hermathena and Heliconius nattereri. RESULTS: We assembled genomes and re-sequenced whole genomes of eight H. nattereri and 71 H. hermathena individuals. These species harbor little genetic diversity, skewed site frequency spectra, and high deleterious mutation loads consistent with recent population bottlenecks. Heliconius hermathena consists of discrete, strongly isolated populations that likely arose from a single population that dispersed after the last glacial maximum. Despite having a unique color pattern combination that suggested a hybrid origin, we found no genome-wide evidence that H. hermathena is a hybrid species. However, H. hermathena mimicry evolved via introgression, from co-mimetic Heliconius erato, of a small genomic region upstream of the color patterning gene cortex. CONCLUSIONS: Heliconius hermathena and H. nattereri population fragmentation, potentially driven by historical climate change and recent deforestation, has significantly reduced the genetic health of these rare species. Our results contribute to a growing body of evidence that introgression of color patterning alleles between co-mimetic species appears to be a general feature of Heliconius evolution.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Butterflies/genetics , Ecosystem , Genome , Hybridization, Genetic , Animals , Brazil , Female , Male , Whole Genome Sequencing
6.
Curr Biol ; 29(23): 3996-4009.e4, 2019 12 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31735676

ABSTRACT

To what extent can we predict how evolution occurs? Do genetic architectures and developmental processes canalize the evolution of similar outcomes in a predictable manner? Or do historical contingencies impose alternative pathways to answer the same challenge? Examples of Müllerian mimicry between distantly related butterfly species provide natural replicates of evolution, allowing us to test whether identical wing patterns followed parallel or novel trajectories. Here, we explore the role that the signaling ligand WntA plays in generating mimetic wing patterns in Heliconius butterflies, a group with extraordinary mimicry-related wing pattern diversity. The radiation is relatively young, and numerous cases of wing pattern mimicry have evolved within the last 2.5-4.5 Ma. WntA is an important target of natural selection and is one of four major effect loci that underlie much of the pattern variation in the group. We used CRISPR/Cas9 targeted mutagenesis to generate WntA-deficient wings in 12 species and a further 10 intraspecific variants, including three co-mimetic pairs. In all tested butterflies, WntA knockouts affect pattern broadly and cause a shift among every possible scale cell type. Interestingly, the co-mimics lacking WntA were very different, suggesting that the gene networks that pattern a wing have diverged considerably among different lineages. Thus, although natural selection channeled phenotypic convergence, divergent developmental contexts between the two major Heliconius lineages opened different developmental routes to evolve resemblance. Consequently, even under very deterministic evolutionary scenarios, our results underscore a surprising unpredictability in the developmental paths underlying convergence in a recent radiation.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Biological Mimicry , Butterflies/growth & development , Pigmentation , Selection, Genetic , Wings, Animal/physiology , Animals , Phenotype , Wings, Animal/growth & development
7.
Mol Biol Evol ; 36(12): 2842-2853, 2019 12 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31504750

ABSTRACT

Some genes have repeatedly been found to control diverse adaptations in a wide variety of organisms. Such gene reuse reveals not only the diversity of phenotypes these unique genes control but also the composition of developmental gene networks and the genetic routes available to and taken by organisms during adaptation. However, the causes of gene reuse remain unclear. A small number of large-effect Mendelian loci control a huge diversity of mimetic butterfly wing color patterns, but reasons for their reuse are difficult to identify because the genetic basis of mimicry has primarily been studied in two systems with correlated factors: female-limited Batesian mimicry in Papilio swallowtails (Papilionidae) and non-sex-limited Müllerian mimicry in Heliconius longwings (Nymphalidae). Here, we break the correlation between phylogenetic relationship and sex-limited mimicry by identifying loci controlling female-limited mimicry polymorphism Hypolimnas misippus (Nymphalidae) and non-sex-limited mimicry polymorphism in Papilio clytia (Papilionidae). The Papilio clytia polymorphism is controlled by the genome region containing the gene cortex, the classic P supergene in Heliconius numata, and loci controlling color pattern variation across Lepidoptera. In contrast, female-limited mimicry polymorphism in Hypolimnas misippus is associated with a locus not previously implicated in color patterning. Thus, although many species repeatedly converged on cortex and its neighboring genes over 120 My of evolution of diverse color patterns, female-limited mimicry polymorphisms each evolved using a different gene. Our results support conclusions that gene reuse occurs mainly within ∼10 My and highlight the puzzling diversity of genes controlling seemingly complex female-limited mimicry polymorphisms.


Subject(s)
Biological Mimicry/genetics , Butterflies/genetics , Evolution, Molecular , Phylogeny , Pigmentation/genetics , Animals , Female , Male , Polymorphism, Genetic
8.
Curr Biol ; 28(21): 3469-3474.e4, 2018 11 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30415702

ABSTRACT

Neotropical Heliconius butterflies display a diversity of warningly colored wing patterns, which serve roles in both Müllerian mimicry and mate choice behavior. Wing pattern diversity in Heliconius is controlled by a small number of unlinked, Mendelian "switch" loci [1]. One of these, termed the K locus, switches between yellow and white color patterns, important mimicry signals as well as mating cues [2-4]. Furthermore, mate preference behavior is tightly linked to this locus [4]. K controls the distribution of white versus yellow scales on the wing, with a dominant white allele and a recessive yellow allele. Here, we combine fine-scale genetic mapping, genome-wide association studies, gene expression analyses, population and comparative genomics, and genome editing with CRISPR/Cas9 to characterize the molecular basis of the K locus in Heliconius and to infer its evolutionary history. We show that white versus yellow color variation in Heliconius cydno is due to alternate haplotypes at a putative cis-regulatory element (CRE) downstream of a tandem duplication of the homeodomain transcription factor aristaless. Aristaless1 (al1) and aristaless2 (al2) are differentially regulated between white and yellow wings throughout development with elevated expression of al1 in developing white wings, suggesting a role in repressing pigmentation. Consistent with this, knockout of al1 causes white wings to become yellow. The evolution of wing color in this group has been marked by retention of the ancestral yellow color in many lineages, a single origin of white coloration in H. cydno, and subsequent introgression of white color from H. cydno into H. melpomene.


Subject(s)
Biological Mimicry , Butterflies/physiology , Insect Proteins/genetics , Mating Preference, Animal , Pigments, Biological/metabolism , Wings, Animal/physiology , Animals , Butterflies/genetics , Color , Insect Proteins/metabolism
9.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 114(40): 10701-10706, 2017 10 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28923954

ABSTRACT

Butterfly wing patterns provide a rich comparative framework to study how morphological complexity develops and evolves. Here we used CRISPR/Cas9 somatic mutagenesis to test a patterning role for WntA, a signaling ligand gene previously identified as a hotspot of shape-tuning alleles involved in wing mimicry. We show that WntA loss-of-function causes multiple modifications of pattern elements in seven nymphalid butterfly species. In three butterflies with a conserved wing-pattern arrangement, WntA is necessary for the induction of stripe-like patterns known as symmetry systems and acquired a novel eyespot activator role specific to Vanessa forewings. In two Heliconius species, WntA specifies the boundaries between melanic fields and the light-color patterns that they contour. In the passionvine butterfly Agraulis, WntA removal shows opposite effects on adjacent pattern elements, revealing a dual role across the wing field. Finally, WntA acquired a divergent role in the patterning of interveinous patterns in the monarch, a basal nymphalid butterfly that lacks stripe-like symmetry systems. These results identify WntA as an instructive signal for the prepatterning of a biological system of exuberant diversity and illustrate how shifts in the deployment and effects of a single developmental gene underlie morphological change.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Insect Proteins , Lepidoptera , Pigmentation/physiology , Wings, Animal/growth & development , Wnt Proteins , Animals , Insect Proteins/genetics , Insect Proteins/metabolism , Lepidoptera/genetics , Lepidoptera/metabolism , Wnt Proteins/genetics , Wnt Proteins/metabolism
10.
Mol Phylogenet Evol ; 82 Pt A: 156-65, 2015 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25300455

ABSTRACT

The tribe Heliconiini (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae) is a diverse group of butterflies distributed throughout the Neotropics, which has been studied extensively, in particular the genus Heliconius. However, most of the other lineages, such as Dione, which are less diverse and considered basal within the group, have received little attention. Basic information, such as species limits and geographical distributions remain uncertain for this genus. Here we used multilocus DNA sequence data and the geographical distribution analysis across the entire range of Dione in the Neotropical region in order to make inferences on the evolutionary history of this poorly explored lineage. Bayesian time-tree reconstruction allows inferring two major diversification events in this tribe around 25mya. Lineages thought to be ancient, such as Dione and Agraulis, are as recent as Heliconius. Dione formed a monophyletic clade, sister to the genus Agraulis. Dione juno, D. glycera and D. moneta were reciprocally monophyletic and formed genetic clusters, with the first two more close related than each other in relation to the third. Divergence time estimates support the hypothesis that speciation in Dione coincided with both the rise of Passifloraceae (the host plants) and the uplift of the Andes. Since the sister species D. glycera and D. moneta are specialized feeders on passion-vine lineages that are endemic to areas located either within or adjacent to the Andes, we inferred that they co-speciated with their host plants during this vicariant event.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Butterflies/classification , Phylogeny , Animals , Bayes Theorem , Passiflora , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Tropical Climate
11.
Rev. bras. entomol ; 58(2): 129-141, Apr.-June 2014. ilus, tab
Article in English | LILACS | ID: lil-714738

ABSTRACT

External morphology of the immature stages of Neotropical heliconians: IX. Dione glycera (C. Felder & R. Felder) (Lepidoptera, Nymphalidae, Heliconiinae). The biology of the Andean silverspot butterfly Dione glycera (C. Felder & R. Felder, 1861) is still poorly known. This species is restricted to high elevations in the Andes, where the immature stages are found in close association with species of Passiflora belonging to the section Tacsonia (Juss.) Harms, especially P. tripartida var. mollissima (Kunth), which is grown for subsistence by villagers. Herein we describe and illustrate the external features of the egg, larva and pupa of D. glycera, based on light and scanning electron microscopy.

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