Andreas Remmel, Karl K Käther, Peter F Stadler, Steffen Lemke
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Understanding how genomic information is selectively utilized across different life stages is essential for deciphering the developmental and evolutionary strategies of metazoans. In holometabolous insects, the dynamic expression of genes enables distinct functional adaptations at embryonic, larval, pupal, and adult stages, likely contributing to their evolutionary success. While Drosophila melanogaster (D. melanogaster) has been extensively studied, less is known about the evolutionary dynamics that could govern stage-specific gene expression. To address this question, we compared the distribution of stage-specific genes, that is, genes expressed in temporally restricted developmental stages, across the development of D. melanogaster and Aedes aegypti (A. aegypti). Using tau-scoring, a computational method to determine gene expression specificity, we found that, on average, a large proportion of genes (20%-30% of all protein-coding genes) in both species exhibit restricted expression to specific developmental stages. Phylostratigraphy analysis, a method to date the age of genes, further revealed that stage-specific genes fall into two major categories: highly conserved and recently evolved. Notably, many of the recently evolved and stage-specific genes identified in A. aegypti and D. melanogaster are restricted to Diptera order (20%-35% of all stage-specific genes), highlighting ongoing evolutionary processes that continue to shape life-stage transitions. Overall, our findings underscore the complex interplay between gene evolutionary age, expression specificity, and morphological transformations in development. These results suggest that the attraction of genes to critical life-stage transitions is an ongoing process that may not be constant across evolutionary time or uniform between different lineages, offering new insights into the adaptability and diversification of dipteran genomes.
期刊介绍:
Developmental Evolution is a branch of evolutionary biology that integrates evidence and concepts from developmental biology, phylogenetics, comparative morphology, evolutionary genetics and increasingly also genomics, systems biology as well as synthetic biology to gain an understanding of the structure and evolution of organisms.
The Journal of Experimental Zoology -B: Molecular and Developmental Evolution provides a forum where these fields are invited to bring together their insights to further a synthetic understanding of evolution from the molecular through the organismic level. Contributions from all these branches of science are welcome to JEZB.
We particularly encourage submissions that apply the tools of genomics, as well as systems and synthetic biology to developmental evolution. At this time the impact of these emerging fields on developmental evolution has not been explored to its fullest extent and for this reason we are eager to foster the relationship of systems and synthetic biology with devo evo.