果蝇性别偏见网络和性对抗冲突节点。

International journal of evolutionary biology Pub Date : 2013-01-01 Epub Date: 2013-01-22 DOI:10.1155/2013/545392
Matthew E B Hansen, Rob J Kulathinal
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引用次数: 6

摘要

当雄性和雌性拥有相反的生殖策略时,就会发生性对抗或冲突。基因组中很大一部分性别偏倚基因为发生冲突提供了相当大的机会,这表明性别拮抗可能是分子水平上的普遍现象。在这里,我们采用了一种新的策略,通过将来自全基因组表达数据的雄性、雌性和性别无偏网络与可用的遗传和蛋白质相互作用数据相结合,来识别黑腹果蝇性别冲突的潜在节点。我们发现,性别偏见网络占总互动网络的很大一部分(约1/3),男性网络拥有的节点(基因)数量几乎是女性网络的两倍。然而,从幂律分布中可以看出,相对于女性子网,男性子网的边缘或互动伙伴要少得多。我们进一步确定了598个性别无偏的基因可以作为基因座间性冲突的间接节点,以及271个男性和女性偏见基因之间潜在冲突的直接节点对。这种潜在冲突节点的普遍存在可以解释性别偏向和非性别偏向基因通过这种性选择的分子机制的快速进化,甚至在像果蝇这样名义上是两性二型的分类群中也是如此。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Sex-biased networks and nodes of sexually antagonistic conflict in Drosophila.

Sex-biased networks and nodes of sexually antagonistic conflict in Drosophila.

Sex-biased networks and nodes of sexually antagonistic conflict in Drosophila.

Sexual antagonism, or conflict, can occur when males and females harbor opposing reproductive strategies. The large fraction of sex-biased genes in genomes present considerable opportunities for conflict to occur, suggesting that sexual antagonism may potentially be a general phenomenon at the molecular level. Here, we employ a novel strategy to identify potential nodes of sexual conflict in Drosophila melanogaster by coupling male, female, and sex-unbiased networks derived from genome-wide expression data with available genetic and protein interaction data. We find that sex-biased networks comprise a large fraction (~1/3) of the total interaction network with the male network possessing nearly twice the number of nodes (genes) relative to the female network. However, there are far less edges or interaction partners among male relative to female subnetworks as seen in their power law distributions. We further identified 598 sex-unbiased genes that can act as indirect nodes of interlocus sexual conflict as well as 271 direct nodal pairs of potential conflict between male- and female-biased genes. The pervasiveness of such potentially conflicting nodes may explain the rapid evolution of sex-biased as well as non-sex-biased genes via this molecular mechanism of sexual selection even among taxa such as Drosophila that are nominally sexually dimorphic.

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