4.5 Article

Mating strategy predicts gene presence/absence patterns in a genus of simultaneously hermaphroditic flatworms

Journal

EVOLUTION
Volume 76, Issue 12, Pages 3054-3066

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/evo.14635

Keywords

Gene loss; gene turnover; molecular evolution; sexual conflict; sexual selection

Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation [31003A_162543, 310030_184916]
  2. D-BSSE ETH Zurich Genomics Facility Basel
  3. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [310030_184916, 31003A_162543] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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Gene repertoire turnover is a characteristic of genome evolution. This study focuses on Macrostomum, a genus of flatworms, to analyze the presence/absence patterns of genes associated with different mating strategies. The results show that genes in the testis region of species that mate by hypodermic injection of sperm evolve more rapidly and have a lower probability of being observed in other species.
Gene repertoire turnover is a characteristic of genome evolution. However, we lack well-replicated analyses of presence/absence patterns associated with different selection contexts. Here, we study similar to 100 transcriptome assemblies across Macrostomum, a genus of simultaneously hermaphroditic flatworms exhibiting multiple convergent shifts in mating strategy and associated reproductive morphologies. Many species mate reciprocally, with partners donating and receiving sperm at the same time. Other species convergently evolved to mate by hypodermic injection of sperm into the partner. We find that for orthologous transcripts annotated as expressed in the body region containing the testes, sequences from hypodermically inseminating species diverge more rapidly from the model species, Macrostomum lignano, and have a lower probability of being observed in other species. For other annotation categories, simpler models with a constant rate of similarity decay with increasing genetic distance from M. lignano match the observed patterns well. Thus, faster rates of sequence evolution for hypodermically inseminating species in testis-region genes result in higher rates of homology detection failure, yielding a signal of rapid evolution in sequence presence/absence patterns. Our results highlight the utility of considering appropriate null models for unobserved genes, as well as associating patterns of gene presence/absence with replicated evolutionary events in a phylogenetic context.

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