학술논문

The early embryonic transcriptome of a Hawaiian Drosophila picture‐wing fly shows evidence of altered gene expression and novel gene evolution
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of Experimental Zoology Part B Molecular and Developmental Evolution. 338(5)
Subject
Biological Sciences
Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
Genetics
Human Genome
Animals
Drosophila
Evolution
Molecular
Hawaii
Phylogeny
Transcriptome
de novo genes
embryo
Hawaiian Drosophila
Hox genes
maternal-to-zygotic-transition
novel genes
transcriptomics
Evolutionary Biology
Zoology
Evolutionary biology
Language
Abstract
A massive adaptive radiation on the Hawaiian archipelago has produced approximately one-quarter of the fly species in the family Drosophilidae. The Hawaiian Drosophila clade has long been recognized as a model system for the study of both the ecology of island endemics and the evolution of developmental mechanisms, but relatively few genomic and transcriptomic datasets are available for this group. We present here a differential expression analysis of the transcriptional profiles of two highly conserved embryonic stages in the Hawaiian picture-wing fly Drosophila grimshawi. When we compared our results to previously published datasets across the family Drosophilidae, we identified cases of both gains and losses of gene representation in D. grimshawi, including an apparent delay in Hox gene activation. We also found a high expression of unannotated genes. Most transcripts of unannotated genes with open reading frames do not have identified homologs in non-Hawaiian Drosophila species, although the vast majority have sequence matches in genomes of other Hawaiian picture-wing flies. Some of these unannotated genes may have arisen from noncoding sequence in the ancestor of Hawaiian flies or during the evolution of the clade. Our results suggest that both the modified use of ancestral genes and the evolution of new ones may occur in rapid radiations.