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Multiple large inversions and breakpoint rewiring of gene expression in the evolution of the fire ant social supergene
Author(s) -
YuChing Huang,
Viet Dai Dang,
NiChen Chang,
John Wang
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
proceedings of the royal society b biological sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.342
H-Index - 253
eISSN - 1471-2954
pISSN - 0962-8452
DOI - 10.1098/rspb.2018.0221
Subject(s) - supergene (geology) , biology , breakpoint , gene , allele , evolutionary biology , inversion (geology) , genetics , chromosomal inversion , paleontology , chromosomal translocation , structural basin , karyotype , chromosome , weathering
Supergenes consist of co-adapted loci that segregate together and are associated with adaptive traits. In the fire antSolenopsis invicta , two ‘social’ supergene variants regulate differences in colony queen number and other traits. Suppressed recombination in this system is maintained, in part, by a greater than 9 Mb inversion, but the supergene is larger. Has the supergene inS. invicta undergone multiple large inversions? The initial gene content of the inverted allele of a supergene would be the same as that of the wild-type allele. So, how did the inversion increase in frequency? To address these questions, we cloned one extreme breakpoint in the fire ant supergene. In doing so, we found a second large (greater than 800 Kb) rearrangement. Furthermore, we determined the temporal order of the two big inversions based on the translocation pattern of a third small fragment. Because theS. invicta supergene lacks evolutionary strata, our finding of multiple inversions may support an introgression model of the supergene. Finally, we showed that one of the inversions swapped the promoter of a breakpoint-adjacent gene, which might have conferred a selective advantage relative to the non-inverted allele. Our findings provide a rare example of gene alterations arising directly from an inversion event.

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