4.5 Article

Adaptation and Conservation throughout the Drosophila melanogaster Life-Cycle

Journal

GENOME BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 11, Issue 5, Pages 1463-1482

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/gbe/evz086

Keywords

adaptation; conservation; natural selection; evo-devo; DFE-alpha; hourglass hypothesis

Funding

  1. Finnish Academy
  2. Spanish Ministerio de Economia y Empresa [MINECO CGL2017-89160-P]
  3. Generalitat de Catalunya [2017SGR 1379]
  4. Secretaria d'Universitats i Recerca del Departament d'Empresa i Coneixement de la Generalitat de Catalunya [FI-DGR 2015]

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Previous studies of the evolution of genes expressed at different life-cycle stages of Drosophila melanogaster have not been able to disentangle adaptive from nonadaptive substitutions when using nonsynonymous sites. Here, we overcome this limitation by combining whole-genome polymorphism data from D. melanogaster and divergence data between D. melanogaster and Drosophila yakuba. For the set of genes expressed at different life-cycle stages of D. melanogaster, as reported in modENCODE, we estimate the ratio of substitutions relative to polymorphism between nonsynonymous and synonymous sites (alpha) and then alpha is discomposed into the ratio of adaptive (omega(a)) and nonadaptive (omega(na)) substitutions to synonymous substitutions. We find that the genes expressed in mid- and late-embryonic development are the most conserved, whereas those expressed in early development and postembryonic stages are the least conserved. Importantly, we found that low conservation in early development is due to high rates of nonadaptive substitutions (high omega(na)), whereas in postembryonic stages it is due, instead, to high rates of adaptive substitutions (high omega(a)). By using estimates of different genomic features (codon bias, average intron length, exon number, recombination rate, among others), we also find that genes expressed in mid- and late-embryonic development show the most complex architecture: they are larger, have more exons, more transcripts, and longer introns. In addition, these genes are broadly expressed among all stages. We suggest that all these genomic features are related to the conservation of mid- and late-embryonic development. Globally, our study supports the hourglass pattern of conservation and adaptation over the life-cycle.

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