Cis-regulatory variation in the shavenbaby gene underlies intraspecific phenotypic variation, mirroring interspecific divergence in the same trait.

Evolution

Instituto de Fisiología, Biología Molecular y Neurociencias (IFIBYNE, CONICET-UBA) and Departamento de Ecología, Genética y Evolución (FCEyN, UBA), Buenos Aires, 1428, Argentina.

Published: February 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent advances in genetics have improved our understanding of morphological variation within species, but the connection between this variation and species differences is still unclear.
  • A study on the non-sensory hairs (trichomes) of Drosophila larvae revealed that changes in the regulation of the shavenbaby (svb) gene account for the loss of certain trichomes in some species.
  • Findings in D. virilis show that a significant genetic locus, including svb, explains most differences in trichome numbers between strains, but other genetic factors also contribute, highlighting the complexity of genetic variation both within and between species.

Article Abstract

Despite considerable progress in recent decades in dissecting the genetic causes of natural morphological variation, there is limited understanding of how variation within species ultimately contributes to species differences. We have studied patterning of the non-sensory hairs, commonly known as "trichomes," on the dorsal cuticle of first-instar larvae of Drosophila. Most Drosophila species produce a dense lawn of dorsal trichomes, but a subset of these trichomes were lost in D. sechellia and D. ezoana due entirely to regulatory evolution of the shavenbaby (svb) gene. Here, we describe intraspecific variation in dorsal trichome patterns of first-instar larvae of D. virilis that is similar to the trichome pattern variation identified previously between species. We found that a single large effect QTL, which includes svb, explains most of the trichome number difference between two D. virilis strains and that svb expression correlates with the trichome difference between strains. This QTL does not explain the entire difference between strains, implying that additional loci contribute to variation in trichome numbers. Thus, the genetic architecture of intraspecific variation exhibits similarities and differences with interspecific variation that may reflect differences in long-term and short-term evolutionary processes.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/evo.14142DOI Listing

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