首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


DEVELOPMENTAL DECOUPLING OF ALTERNATIVE PHENOTYPES: INSIGHTS FROM THE TRANSCRIPTOMES OF HORN‐POLYPHENIC BEETLES
Authors:Emilie C Snell‐Rood  Amy Cash  Mira V Han  Teiya Kijimoto  Justen Andrews  Armin P Moczek
Institution:1. Department of Biology, Indiana University, 915 E. Third Street, Myers Hall 150, Bloomington Indiana 47405‐7107;2. E‐mail: emcsnell@indiana.edu
Abstract:Developmental mechanisms play an important role in determining the costs, limits, and evolutionary consequences of phenotypic plasticity. One issue central to these claims is the hypothesis of developmental decoupling, where alternate morphs result from evolutionarily independent developmental pathways. We address this assumption through a microarray study that tests whether differences in gene expression between alternate morphs are as divergent as those between sexes, a classic example of developmental decoupling. We then examine whether genes with morph‐biased expression are less conserved than genes with shared expression between morphs, as predicted if developmental decoupling relaxes pleiotropic constraints on divergence. We focus on the developing horns and brains of two species of horned beetles with impressive sexual‐ and morph‐dimorphism in the expression of horns and fighting behavior. We find that patterns of gene expression were as divergent between morphs as they were between sexes. However, overall patterns of gene expression were also highly correlated across morphs and sexes. Morph‐biased genes were more evolutionarily divergent, suggesting a role of relaxed pleiotropic constraints or relaxed selection. Together these results suggest that alternate morphs are to some extent developmentally decoupled, and that this decoupling has significant evolutionary consequences. However, alternative morphs may not be as developmentally decoupled as sometimes assumed and such hypotheses of development should be revisited and refined.
Keywords:Developmental decoupling  horned beetles  microarray  Onthophagus  pleiotropy  polyphenism  relaxed selection  sexual dimorphism
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号