4.8 Article

Tiger Swallowtail Genome Reveals Mechanisms for Speciation and Caterpillar Chemical Defense

Journal

CELL REPORTS
Volume 10, Issue 6, Pages 910-919

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2015.01.026

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Funding

  1. NIH [GM094575]
  2. Welch Foundation [I-1505]

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Predicting phenotype from genotype represents the epitome of biological questions. Comparative genomics of appropriate model organisms holds the promise of making it possible. However, the high heterozygosity of many Eukaryotes currently prohibits assembling their genomes. Here, we report the 376 Mb genome sequence of Papilio glaucus (Pgl), the first sequenced genome from the Papilionidae family. We obtained the genome from a wildcaught specimen using a cost-effective strategy that overcomes the high (2%) heterozygosity problem. Comparative analyses suggest the molecular bases of various phenotypic traits, including terpene production in the Papilionidae-specific organ, osmeterium. Comparison of Pgl and Papilio canadensis transcriptomes reveals mutation hotspots (4% genes) associated with their divergence: four key circadian clock proteins are enriched in interspecies mutations and likely responsible for the difference in pupal diapause. Finally, the Pgl genome confirms Papilio appalachiensis as a hybrid of Pgl and Pca, but suggests it inherited 3/4 of its genes from Pca.

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