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A Selective Sweep Associated With a Recent Gene Transposition in Drosophila miranda
Soojin Yia and Brian Charlesworthba Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637-1573
b Institute of Cell, Animal and Population Biology, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH9 3JT, United Kingdom
Corresponding author: Soojin Yi, Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Chicago, 1101 E. 57th St., Chicago, IL 60637., soojinyi{at}midway.uchicago.edu (E-mail)
| ABSTRACT |
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In Drosophila miranda, a chromosome fusion between the Y chromosome and the autosome corresponding to Muller's element C has created a new sex chromosome system. The chromosome attached to the ancestral Y chromosome is transmitted paternally and hence is not exposed to crossing over. This chromosome, conventionally called the neo-Y, and the homologous neo-X chromosome display many properties of evolving sex chromosomes. We report here the transposition of the exuperantia1 (exu1) locus from a neo-sex chromosome to the ancestral X chromosome of D. miranda. Exu1 is known to have several critical developmental functions, including a male-specific role in spermatogenesis. The ancestral location of exu1 is conserved in the sibling species of D. miranda, as well as in a more distantly related species. The transposition of exu1 can be interpreted as an adaptive fixation, driven by a selective advantage conferred by its effect on dosage compensation. This explanation is supported by the pattern of within-species sequence variation at exu1 and the nearby exu2 locus. The implications of this phenomenon for genome evolution are discussed.
THE evolution of Drosophila karyotypes exhibits a strong conservation of the gene content of chromosomal arms, which are conventionally referred to as "elements" (![]()
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An illuminating example of a neo-sex chromosome system is provided by Drosophila miranda. In this species, element C has fused with the Y chromosome, creating a neo-Y chromosome; its free homolog constitutes the X2 or neo-X chromosome (![]()
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12 million years ago (![]()
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Our aim was to investigate DNA sequence variation at genes on the neo-sex chromosomes of D. miranda to make inferences concerning the nature of the forces involved in sex chromosome evolution (![]()
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Since exu is located on element C in D. melanogaster (![]()
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Species and strains:
Twelve D. miranda lines were used, as described in Table 1 of ![]()
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Amplification and the cloning of exu genes:
Primers for amplifying D. miranda exu1 alleles were designed using regions conserved between D. melanogaster and D. pseudoobscura. These are 5' CTC CCC TTT GCC CAT TTT CCA 3' for the forward primer and 5' TTA GTT GGT GGC AGC 3' for the reverse primer [the resulting PCR product corresponds to nucleotides 2071624 of the exu1 sequence reported from D. pseudoobscura (GenBank accession no.
L22554)]. For exu2 alleles, several primer pairs were designed from D. pseudoobscura sequences and those providing the most reliable PCR reactions were chosen. The sequences are 5' TTT CCA GAT TGT CCA GTT 3' and 5' GAG TGC CAT TGC CAG AGC 3' for forward and reverse primers [the product corresponds to nucleotides 2181305 of a D. pseudoobscura allele (GenBank accession no.
L22553)]. For both exu loci, 30 cycles of PCR reactions with annealing temperature 54° and extension at 72° were successfully used, following denaturation at 94°. After exu1 and exu2 in D. miranda were found to be located on XL in D. miranda, a single male fly from each line was used for PCR templates to generate DNA polymorphism data.
All the sequencing was performed by the ampliTaq FS cycle sequencing method (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA), using an ABI 377 sequencer. Additional sequencing primers were designed so that they would be spaced
450 bp apart on each strand, and the sequences are available on request from the corresponding author. Both strands were sequenced. The only variant allele from the exu1 survey was verified through three different full sequencing runs on DNA from three different male flies from the MA32 line. All the sequences obtained from this study are deposited in GenBank (accession nos.
AF286098,
AF286099,
AF286100,
AF286101,
AF286102,
AF286103,
AF286104,
AF286105,
AF286106,
AF286107,
AF286108,
AF286109,
AF286110,
AF286111).
In situ hybridization and genomic Southern blotting:
Preparation and in situ hybridization of salivary chromosome squashes from third instar larvae generally followed the protocol described in ![]()
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High molecular weight genomic DNA isolated using the Puregene DNA isolation kit (Gentra, Research Triangle Park, NC) was used for the Southern analyses. The digoxygenin (DIG) nonradioactive system (Roche Diagnostics) was used for labeling probes and detecting hybridization. The protocol supplied by the manufacturer was generally followed for the Southern analyses, with slight modifications. PCR products prepared in the same way as for in situ hybridization and labeled with DIG by random primer extension were used to produce the probes.
Data analysis:
Sequences were first aligned using the Sequencher 3.0 program and then edited and aligned manually. Published sequences for exu1 and exu2 in D. pseudoobscura were used to assign the coding regions for the exu alleles of different species. The nucleotide site diversity
, based on the average pairwise differences among alleles (![]()
, based on the number of segregating sites in the sample (![]()
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| RESULTS |
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Localizations of the exu loci:
The exu gene of D. melanogaster is located on polytene band 57A810 (chromosome arm 2R; Muller's element C; see FlyBase). To determine whether the location of exu on element C is ancestral in the species studied here, in situ hybridization was performed using amplified exu1 sequences of D. pseudoobscura as probes to polytene chromosomes of several different species (the sequences used are the same for the polymorphism study described below). Element C corresponds to chromosome 3 in D. pseudoobscura and D. persimilis, but forms the neo-sex chromosome system in their close relative D. miranda (see Introduction). The results show that the location of exu1 on element C is indeed conserved in D. subobscura, D. affinis, D. pseudoobscura, and D. persimilis (Fig 1; the results for D. persimilis are not shown).
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In D. miranda, however, there was no sign of hybridization to the neo-X chromosome. In fact, exu1 was found on XL (Fig 1), at band 43 of ![]()
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The nature and scale of the rearrangement:
From the direct observation of polytene chromosomes by means of in situ hybridization, there was no evidence that any neo-sex-linked exu1 alleles exist in the D. miranda genome. The status of the ancestral neo-sex-linked exu1 alleles was further investigated by genomic Southern blotting, using various restriction digestion reactions. Genomic Southern blots from D. pseudoobscura show the presence of two exu loci, as previously reported (Fig 2A; ![]()
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Males and females of D. miranda show different banding patterns in genomic Southern blots. While the major bands corresponding to the exu1 and exu2 loci were generally weaker in males because of their X-linkage (the same amount of total genomic DNA was used for each lane), in each set there was one band with stronger intensity in males, with a much weaker corresponding band in females (Fig 2A and Fig B). This suggests neo-sex linkage for that particular band, the neo-X locus possessing less homology than the neo-Y-linked allele to the exu1 locus used as probe. The intensities of the neo-X-linked bands were very low.
Furthermore, we succeeded in finding some enzyme pairs that generate male-specific bands (i.e., neo-Y-linked alleles; lanes 5 and 6 in Fig 2B). The neo-Y-linked exu1 allele still appears to possess a relatively high homology to exu1, even though it could not be seen by in situ hybridization to the polytene chromosomes, probably due to the poor banding pattern of the neo-Y chromosome in such preparations.
We wanted to determine the scale of the genomic material including the exu1 locus that has been duplicated onto the X chromosome of D. miranda. The following evidence suggests that the observed location of exu1 has not resulted from a large-scale translocation. ![]()
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Another insight comes from the location of exu2, which in D. miranda is distal but very close to exu1 (Fig 1). The location of exu2 is well conserved in the three species surveyed, setting a distal boundary for the segment of genome that is new in D. miranda. From these observations, we conclude that the most parsimonious interpretation of the location of exu1 is that a small section of genome, including the exu1 locus of D. miranda, has been duplicated on XL, close to exu2. The ancestral neo-X site then lost its homology to a substantial degree, while the neo-Y-linked site has also lost some homology, so that it cannot be detected by our PCR approach. In the following section, we present molecular population genetic analyses of the exu1 and exu2 loci, to infer the underlying evolutionary forces responsible for this unusual phenomenon.
Sequence variation at the exu1 locus in D. miranda:
The function of exu1 in male spermatogenesis, together with the ancestral location of exu1 on the newly developing sex chromosomes of D. miranda and its new location on the true X chromosome, have led us to form a "selective" interpretation of this movement of exu1 (see DISCUSSION). In what follows, we refer to this movement as the "transposition" of exu1, following ![]()
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The results of the nucleotide variation survey of exu1 from 12 lines of D. miranda are summarized in Table 1 and Fig 3. We found 1 allele that differs from 11 other identical alleles by two singleton variants. These were both silent, one being a synonymous mutation in the second exon, the other in the intron between exons 2 and 3. They were inferred to be derived, when compared with the outgroup sequence from D. pseudoobscura. The level of nucleotide diversity (0.86 x 10-3 for silent sites) is lower than the previously reported lowest estimate of nucleotide diversity from D. miranda; the silent site diversity from hsp82 estimated from 4 alleles was 1.59 x 10-3 (![]()
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The level of diversity at exu1 is much lower than for a more proximal X-linked gene previously surveyed from this species, period (![]()
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In addition to its extremely reduced level of variation, exu1 shows an unusual configuration of variation: the two singletons observed are in the same haplotype. Under the infinite sites model, this must reflect two mutations that occurred on the same external branch of the gene genealogy. We constructed the following test to examine the probability of the presence of two mutations on the same external branch under a neutral genealogy. Neutral genealogies without recombination were simulated according to the standard coalescence scheme (![]()
Sequence variation at the exu2 locus of D. miranda:
We were also interested in the pattern of molecular variation at the exu2 locus in D. miranda, because of its close linkage to exu1. We found six polymorphic sites (Table 1 and Fig 3). The level of nucleotide diversity appears to be reduced compared to the more proximal gene, per (Table 1), although this is not significant on the HKA test. Among the six segregating sites, four were singletons. All the low frequency variants were derived, when compared with the outgroup sequence from D. pseudoobscura. Interestingly, the two sites that occurred twice in the population show all four possible haplotypes, consistent with the occurrence of recombination among the informative sites. Two estimators of the population recombination rate 2Ner for the locus (where Ne is the effective population size for autosomal loci and r is the recombination rate in females), C (![]()
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estimate based on the number of segregating sites (![]()
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9% by coalescent simulation. With recombination, as clearly happens at exu2, these tests are conservative, since the true variance is then less than under the assumption of no recombination (![]()
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Divergence of the protein-coding regions:
The sequenced regions of exu1 and exu2 include most of exon 2 and exon 3 of each gene (Fig 3). Within each of the three sibling species, the divergence between exu1 and exu2 was
16% at the DNA level. The frequencies of substitutions per synonymous and nonsynonymous sites for exu1 and exu2 between the three sibling species, D. miranda, D. pseudoobscura, and D. persimilis, are summarized in Table 2. The observation that the ratio of nonsynonymous to synonymous divergence for the two exu loci is <1 for all the three comparisons implies that the functional products of the exu loci are under some selective constraints. The observed levels of synonymous site divergence at these two loci are among the highest for all genes compared between D. miranda and D. pseudoobscura (![]()
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For nonsynonymous sites, exu1 appears to be more constrained than exu2. For example, the nonsynonymous divergences (ka) for exu2 between D. miranda and each of its sibling species lie outside the 95% confidence intervals for the corresponding estimates for exu1. The rate of molecular evolution of the exu genes between D. pseudoobscura and D. persimilis was further tested by a relative rate test (![]()
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Exu1 of D. pseudoobscura has been shown to function in both oogenesis and spermatogenesis, while the function of the duplicated exu2 locus is unclear (LUK et al. 1994). The faster rate of protein evolution at the exu2 locus could be the consequence of a newly acquired function for exu2, following its duplication onto XL. But the high frequency of newly derived replacement site polymorphisms for exu2 in D. miranda (four out of six segregating sites) in fact suggests a less constrained mode of evolution for this locus.
| DISCUSSION |
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Occurrence of transpositions in the genome of Drosophila:
Even though conservation of the content of homologous chromosomal arms across the genus Drosophila has been revealed repeatedly by several different approaches (![]()
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, ß,
) also showed an unusually complex evolutionary history when investigated by in situ hybridization in 14 different Drosophila species (![]()
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Both the mechanisms and the evolutionary implications of these cases remain the topic of speculation. None of the above authors was able to reject the possibility of chromosomal rearrangement as the mechanism of movement of genes between arms, due to the lack of detailed comparative cytological maps in most cases. However, they all noted that it is an unlikely explanation; most scenarios invoke fixation of several chromosomal rearrangements, even in the most parsimonious pathway. For example, to account for the dispersal of Lsp-1 genes in the melanogaster subgroup, three translocations or three fusions and pericentric inversions were required (![]()
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Perhaps we should focus on the common characteristics of the genes showing nonconservation of chromosomal locations to elucidate the causative mechanism. Both the 5S rRNA genes and the histone genes that showed nonconservation (![]()
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A possible selective advantage for the transposition of exu1 to the X chromosome:
The ancestral location of exu1 inferred from the other species is on Muller's element C (see RESULTS), which corresponds to the neo-sex chromosomes of D. miranda (![]()
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The function of exu1 inferred from data on D. melanogaster and D. pseudoobscura not only includes the proper localization of maternal mRNA but also normal spermatogenesis. The role of exu in spermatogenesis appears to be critical, as all exu mutants in D. melanogaster are completely male sterile in the hemizygous state (![]()
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This scenario leads to several interesting predictions. First, we might expect to see more cases of gene transposition from the neo-sex chromosomes to other chromosomes in D. miranda, if the above hypothesis is correct. In fact, we have observed one other case of possible transposition. One of our candidate marker genes on Muller's element C, deadpan, also showed an unusual location in relation to that expected from chromosomal homology. The 2R gene deadpan is the only known autosomal denominator in the sex determination system of D. melanogaster (![]()
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Second, if gene transposition or duplication can be used as a way of achieving dosage compensation, then similar phenomena might be observed in species where there is no apparent evidence of the evolution of chromosome-wide dosage compensation, such as birds (![]()
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Third, we expect to see the footprint of selection at the molecular level for the regions surrounding the recently transposed genes; i.e., we expect to observe the effects of a selective sweep. Theoretical investigations of the selective sweep model make at least two predictions at the molecular level: reduced variability at sites near the target of selection (![]()
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The effect of a putative selective sweep on the nucleotide variability at exu1 and exu2:
As shown above (RESULTS), the pattern of molecular variation at exu1 strongly suggests a recent fixation event driven by natural selection. The observed low level of variability is of a truly exceptional kind, when compared with other known estimates of nucleotide diversity in Drosophila, except for regions of drastically reduced recombination (![]()
The nucleotide variation at exu2 also shows an unusual pattern: a lower level of variation compared to a nearby locus (per) and an excess of singletons. Incorporating the modest amount of recombination inferred from the polymorphism data (see RESULTS), the observed pattern of excess of singletons is significantly incompatible with the neutral model. These results suggest that the exu2 locus has also recently experienced the effect of a selective sweep, possibly associated with the spread of the exu1 transposition.
Under the model of selective fixation of the transposition, the presumptive "single" X chromosome carrying the transposed exu1 gene has reached fixation in the population, eliminating all X chromosomes without the newly duplicated exu1 gene, as is consistent with the inferred ancestry of the variant sites at exu1. If the fixation was recent enough compared to the effective population size, the genealogy after the fixation would resemble a so-called "star phylogeny" (![]()
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(1) |
where µ is the neutral mutation rate and t is the time since the sweep event. The age of the sweep, scaled relative to the effective population size for autosomal genes,
, can thus be estimated as
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(2) |
for an X-linked locus with no sexual selection. Using the
estimate for silent sites from the per locus, this leads to an estimate of 0.08 Ne generations since the putative sweep event. Assuming that the number of segregating sites at exu1 is Poisson distributed, an upper bound for this estimate is obtained as the
that gives a probability
0.05 of obtaining two or fewer segregating sites. This leads to a value of 0.3 Ne generations. Since the estimated Ne of D. miranda, based on silent site diversity, is about half that of D. melanogaster, i.e.,
500,000 (![]()
An alternative possibility to selective fixation of the exu1 transposition is that the observed transposition was fixed in D. miranda by genetic drift, recently enough that it has not yet recovered its standing level of variation (![]()
The shape of the genealogy could also have been significantly distorted by other factors, such as a recent population expansion, which would account for the excess of singletons at exu1 and exu2 in D. miranda. More nucleotide variation surveys of D. miranda are probably necessary to test this hypothesis rigorously, but there is currently no evidence for such an effect from surveys of six autosomal and X-linked loci (![]()
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| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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We thank Manyuan Long for helpful discussions and provision of laboratory space, Wyatt Anderson for confirming the localization of exu1 in D. miranda, Chuck Langley and Steven Schaeffer for inspiring discussions and helpful information, Jeff Wall and Molly Przeworski for estimating the recombination parameters and providing computer programs, and Jody Hey for directing us to the references for the chromosome map of D. affinis. We also thank two anonymous reviewers for their comments on the manuscript, and S.Y. wishes to especially thank Frantz Depaulis for many insightful discussions during the course of writing the manuscript in the same office. This work was supported by National Science Foundation Doctoral Dissertation Improvement Grant DEB-9701098 to S.Y. and by a grant from the Royal Society to B.C.
Manuscript received April 27, 2000; Accepted for publication July 31, 2000.
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