4.8 Article

Viviparity and habitat restrictions may influence the evolution of male reproductive genes in tsetse fly (Glossina) species

Journal

BMC BIOLOGY
Volume 19, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12915-021-01148-4

Keywords

Glossina; Male accessory gland genes; Testis genes; Habitat; Viviparity; Selective pressure

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH [R21 AI109263-01, R21 AI128523]
  2. Joint Division of FAO/IAEA Co-ordinated Research Project on Enhancing Vector Refractoriness to Trypanosome Infection (2013-2018) [D42015]
  3. Joint Division of FAO/IAEA Co-ordinated Research Project on Improvement of colony management in insect mass-rearing for SIT applications [D42017]

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In this study, we investigated the evolutionary patterns of male reproductive genes in Glossina species and found that over 1700 male reproductive genes remained conserved across the genomes of the six species, suggesting strong functional selective pressure imposed by viviparity. These conserved genes, many of which are unique to the Glossina genus, may be candidates for selection in different lineages. The presence of these unique genes and the constraints imposed by viviparity may contribute to the continuous antagonistic co-evolution between parental genomes, ultimately leading to speciation.
Background Glossina species (tsetse flies), the sole vectors of African trypanosomes, maintained along their long evolutionary history a unique reproductive strategy, adenotrophic viviparity. Viviparity reduces their reproductive rate and, as such, imposes strong selective pressures on males for reproductive success. These species live in sub-Saharan Africa, where the distributions of the main sub-genera Fusca, Morsitans, and Palpalis are restricted to forest, savannah, and riverine habitats, respectively. Here we aim at identifying the evolutionary patterns of the male reproductive genes of six species belonging to these three main sub-genera. We then interpreted the different patterns we found across the species in the light of viviparity and the specific habitat restrictions, which are known to shape reproductive behavior. Results We used a comparative genomic approach to build consensus evolutionary trees that portray the selective pressure acting on the male reproductive genes in these lineages. Such trees reflect the long and divergent demographic history that led to an allopatric distribution of the Fusca, Morsitans, and Palpalis species groups. A dataset of over 1700 male reproductive genes remained conserved over the long evolutionary time scale (estimated at 26.7 million years) across the genomes of the six species. We suggest that this conservation may result from strong functional selective pressure on the male imposed by viviparity. It is noteworthy that more than half of these conserved genes are novel sequences that are unique to the Glossina genus and are candidates for selection in the different lineages. Conclusions Tsetse flies represent a model to interpret the evolution and differentiation of male reproductive biology under different, but complementary, perspectives. In the light of viviparity, we must take into account that these genes are constrained by a post-fertilization arena for genomic conflicts created by viviparity and absent in ovipositing species. This constraint implies a continuous antagonistic co-evolution between the parental genomes, thus accelerating inter-population post-zygotic isolation and, ultimately, favoring speciation. Ecological restrictions that affect reproductive behavior may further shape such antagonistic co-evolution.

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