Publications by authors named "Brian Counterman"

Iridescent ultraviolet (IUV) patterns on pierid butterfly wings are phenotypic adaptations commonly used as sexual signals, generated by scales with ultrastructural modifications. Pierid IUV patterns are sexually dichromatic, with reduced size in females, where conspicuous sexual signaling balances courtship against ecological predation. There have been no phylogenetic reconstructions of IUV within Pieridae and little morphological characterization of phenotypic diversity.

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Little is known about the extent to which species use homologous regulatory architectures to achieve phenotypic convergence. By characterizing chromatin accessibility and gene expression in developing wing tissues, we compared the regulatory architecture of convergence between a pair of mimetic butterfly species. Although a handful of color pattern genes are known to be involved in their convergence, our data suggest that different mutational paths underlie the integration of these genes into wing pattern development.

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Neotropical Heliconius butterflies are well known for their intricate behaviors and multiple instances of incipient speciation. Chemosensing plays a fundamental role in the life history of these groups of butterflies and in the establishment of reproductive isolation. However, chemical communication involves synergistic sensory and accessory functions, and it remains challenging to investigate the molecular mechanisms underlying behavioral differences.

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Despite insertions and deletions being the most common structural variants (SVs) found across genomes, not much is known about how much these SVs vary within populations and between closely related species, nor their significance in evolution. To address these questions, we characterized the evolution of indel SVs using genome assemblies of three closely related butterfly species. Over the relatively short evolutionary timescales investigated, up to 18.

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Mating cues evolve rapidly and can contribute to species formation and maintenance. However, little is known about how sexual signals diverge and how this variation integrates with other barrier loci to shape the genomic landscape of reproductive isolation. Here, we elucidate the genetic basis of ultraviolet (UV) iridescence, a courtship signal that differentiates the males of butterflies from a sister species, allowing females to avoid costly heterospecific matings.

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The evolution of mimicry in similarly defended prey is well described by the Müllerian mimicry theory, which predicts the convergence of warning patterns in order to gain the most protection from predators. However, despite this prediction, we can find great diversity of color patterns among Müllerian mimics such as butterflies in the neotropics. Furthermore, some species have evolved the ability to maintain multiple distinct warning patterns in single populations, a phenomenon known as polymorphic mimicry.

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Article Synopsis
  • Sexually dimorphic development leads to significant physical differences in nature, with the gene doublesex (dsx) playing a key role in regulating these sex-specific traits.* -
  • Research on the Southern Dogface butterfly reveals a surprising duplication of the dsx gene that is linked to differences in ultraviolet (UV) wing patterns between males and females.* -
  • This duplicated gene may inhibit certain wing traits in females, indicating that dsx is crucial for controlling the development of secondary sexual characteristics through its molecular flexibility.*
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Hybridizing species provide a powerful system to identify the processes that shape genomic variation and maintain species boundaries. However, complex histories of isolation, gene flow, and selection often generate heterogeneous genomic landscapes of divergence that complicate reconstruction of the speciation history. Here, we explore patterns of divergence to reconstruct recent speciation in the erato clade of Heliconius butterflies.

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Müllerian mimicry strongly exemplifies the power of natural selection. However, the exact measure of such adaptive phenotypic convergence and the possible causes of its imperfection often remain unidentified. Here, we first quantify wing colour pattern differences in the forewing region of 14 co-mimetic colour pattern morphs of the butterfly species and and measure the extent to which mimicking colour pattern morphs are not perfectly identical.

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Comparisons of high-quality, reference butterfly, and moth genomes have been instrumental to advancing our understanding of how hybridization, and natural selection drive genomic change during the origin of new species and novel traits. Here, we present a genome assembly of the Southern Dogface butterfly, Zerene cesonia (Pieridae) whose brilliant wing colorations have been implicated in developmental plasticity, hybridization, sexual selection, and speciation. We assembled 266,407,278 bp of the Z.

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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.

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Color pattern mimicry in butterflies is a classic case study of complex trait adaptation via selection on a few large effect genes. Association studies have linked color pattern variation to a handful of noncoding regions, yet the presumptive cis-regulatory elements (CREs) that control color patterning remain unknown. Here we combine chromatin assays, DNA sequence associations, and genome editing to functionally characterize 5 cis-regulatory elements of the color pattern gene We were surprised to find that the cis-regulatory architecture of is characterized by pleiotropy and regulatory fragility, where deletion of individual cis-regulatory elements has broad effects on both color pattern and wing vein development.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Our research showed that gene flow, or introgression, tends to be less common in areas of the genome that are low in recombination and rich in genes, likely due to the removal of incompatible foreign genes.
  • * We discovered a new genetic inversion linked to a color pattern switch that likely transferred between butterfly lineages through introgression, mirroring a similar genetic change in another related lineage.
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Butterfly eyes are complex organs that are composed of a diversity of proteins and they play a central role in visual signaling and ultimately, speciation, and adaptation. Here, we utilized the whole eye transcriptome to obtain a more holistic view of the evolution of the butterfly eye while accounting for speciation events that co-occur with ancient hybridization. We sequenced and assembled transcriptomes from adult female eyes of eight species representing all major clades of the Heliconius genus and an additional outgroup species, Dryas iulia.

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Article Synopsis
  • Transposable elements (TEs) significantly influence genome evolution, but their repetitive nature makes them challenging to study and annotate.
  • Researchers examined TE content in 19 species of Heliconiine butterflies to understand their role in genomic diversification.
  • Findings revealed substantial variations in TE content across species, with some novel SINE lineages appearing and others going extinct, indicating TEs could shape future evolutionary pathways in these butterflies.
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The vast diversity of animal coloration is generated through a combination of pigment and structural colors. These colors can greatly influence the fitness and life history of an organism. Butterflies and their wing colors are an excellent model to study how these colors can impact the development and success of an organism.

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The use of image data to quantify, study and compare variation in the colors and patterns of organisms requires the alignment of images to establish homology, followed by color-based segmentation of images. Here we describe an R package for image alignment and segmentation that has applications to quantify color patterns in a wide range of organisms. patternize is an R package that quantifies variation in color patterns obtained from image data.

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Sex chromosomes are disproportionately involved in reproductive isolation and adaptation. In support of such a "large-X" effect, genome scans between recently diverged populations and species pairs often identify distinct patterns of divergence on the sex chromosome compared to autosomes. When measures of divergence between populations are higher on the sex chromosome compared to autosomes, such patterns could be interpreted as evidence for faster divergence on the sex chromosome, that is "faster-X", barriers to gene flow on the sex chromosome.

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Identifying the genomic changes that control morphological variation and understanding how they generate diversity is a major goal of evolutionary biology. In butterflies, a small number of genes control the development of diverse wing color patterns. Here, we used full genome sequencing of individuals across the radiation and closely related species to characterize genomic variation associated with wing pattern diversity.

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The Mitchell's satyr, , is an endangered species that is limited to highly isolated habitats in the northern and southern United States. Conservation strategies for isolated endangered species often implement captive breeding and translocation programs for repopulation. However, these programs risk increasing the spread of harmful pathogens, such as the bacterial endosymbiont .

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While transposable elements (TE) have long been suspected of involvement in species diversification, identifying specific roles has been difficult. We recently found evidence of TE-derived regulatory RNAs in a species-rich family of bats. The TE-derived small RNAs are temporally associated with the burst of species diversification, suggesting that they may have been involved in the processes that led to the diversification.

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Article Synopsis
  • Understanding evolutionary processes is essential for tracing species origins, and new genomic technologies facilitate the study of genomic divergence through various levels of reproductive isolation.
  • The research focused on Heliconius butterflies, examining specific genomic regions to investigate divergence patterns in populations with different reproductive isolation scenarios.
  • Findings indicate increased genomic divergence in pairs of hybridizing races correlating with levels of ecological and reproductive isolation, suggesting that divergence occurs early in speciation and that limited gene flow cannot solely explain observed genomic differences.
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Article Synopsis
  • Malaria parasites significantly affect both humans and other vertebrates, leading to bird extinctions and population declines.
  • Recent studies indicate that malaria parasites often switch hosts, which requires them to adapt to different environments, such as varying types of blood cells.
  • Research on the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene reveals signs of adaptive evolution in malaria, particularly during host switches, suggesting that selection pressures are prevalent in the genomes of these parasites.
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