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First case of parthenogenesis in ladybirds (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) suggests new mechanisms for the evolution of asexual reproduction
Authors:Alexandra Magro  Emilie Lecompte  Jean-Louis Hemptinne  Antonio O Soares  Anne-Marie Dutrillaux  Jérôme Murienne  Helmut Fürsch  Bernard Dutrillaux
Institution:1. Laboratoire Evolution et Diversité biologique, UMR EDB 5174 CNRS / UT3 / IRD, Toulouse, France;2. Laboratoire Evolution et Diversité biologique, UMR EDB 5174 CNRS / UT3 / IRD, Toulouse, France

Université Toulouse III-Paul Sabatier, Toulouse, France;3. Laboratoire Evolution et Diversité biologique, UMR EDB 5174 CNRS / UT3 / IRD, Toulouse, France

Ecole Nationale Supérieure de Formation de l'Enseignement Agricole, Auzeville-Tolosane, France;4. Centre for Ecology, Evolution and Environmental Changes, Azorean Biodiversity Group, University of the Azores, Ponta Delgada, Azores, Portugal;5. Institut de Systématique, Evolution, Biodiversité, UMR ISYEB 7205 CNRS / MNHN / UPMC / EPHE, Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris, France;6. Zoologische Staatssammlung München, Munich, Germany

Abstract:Parthenogenesis, the development of unfertilized eggs resulting in the exclusive production of female offspring, is rare in animals relative to sexual reproduction and is mainly reported in invertebrates. It has been hypothesized that polyploidy, hybridization and endosymbiont infections are its major causal events but the mechanisms triggering asexual reproduction remain unclear. Here, we study the proximate causes at the origin of parthenogenesis in the first reported case of asexuality in the Coccinellidae (Coleoptera). The asexual populations were found in the Azores and the Mascarene archipelagos, and were identified as Nephus voeltzkowi Weise, a bisexual species widespread in sub-Saharan Africa. The specimens from both populations are diploid but present different karyotypes and heterozygosities that evoke hybrid origins, commonly associated with parthenogenesis in Coleoptera. However, the close proximity of their genomes (99.8% homology for the complete mitochondrial genome and 99.9% for the complete nuclear ribosomal cluster) together with the congruence between the mtDNA tree and the nuclear tree, and the low heterozygosity levels, suggests that the two populations are not hybrid. We propose that they belong to a single chromosomally polymorphic species undergoing Robertsonian fusions. Furthermore, specimens from both populations are infected with Wolbachia (supergroup B strain), contrary to sympatric bisexual species of the same genus. Although Wolbachia has been shown to induce parthenogenesis in haplodiploid organisms, it has been recently suggested that it could also induce parthenogenesis in hosts with other sex determination systems. Whether chromosome rearrangements and/or Wolbachia infections are post-parthenogenetic events or are at the origin of parthenogenesis still needs to be determined.
Keywords:insularity  Nephus  Robertsonian translocations  the “mate scarcity hypothesis”  Wolbachia
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