Social insect genomes exhibit dramatic evolution in gene composition and regulation while preserving regulatory features linked to sociality

  1. Juergen Gadau4,17
  1. 1 University of Pennsylvania;
  2. 2 University of Muenster;
  3. 3 University of Geneva;
  4. 4 Arizona State University;
  5. 5 University of Lausanne;
  6. 6 University of Copenhagen;
  7. 7 Georgia Institute of Technology;
  8. 8 Georgetown University;
  9. 9 University of Oulu;
  10. 10 University of Houston;
  11. 11 The Johns Hopkins University;
  12. 12 University of Wisconsin-Madison;
  13. 13 New York University;
  14. 14 San Francisco State University;
  15. 15 Earlham College;
  16. 16 University of California, Berkeley
  1. * Corresponding author; email: jgadau{at}asu.edu

Abstract

Genomes of eusocial insects code for dramatic examples of phenotypic plasticity and social organization. We compared the genomes of seven ants, the honeybee, and various solitary insects to examine whether eusocial lineages share distinct features of genomic organization. Each ant lineage contains ~4,000 novel genes, but only 64 of these genes are conserved among all seven ants. Many gene families have been expanded in ants, notably those involved in chemical communication (e.g., desaturases and odorant receptors). Alignment of the ant genomes revealed reduced purifying selection compared to Drosophila without significantly reduced synteny. Correspondingly, ant genomes exhibit dramatic divergence of non-coding regulatory elements, however extant conserved regions are enriched for novel non-coding RNAs and transcription factor binding sites. Comparison of orthologous gene promoters between eusocial and solitary species revealed significant regulatory evolution in both cis (e.g., CREB) and trans (e.g., Forkhead) for nearly 2000 genes, many of which exhibit phenotypic plasticity. Our results emphasize that genomic changes can occur remarkably fast in ants, as two recently diverged leaf-cutter ant species exhibit faster accumulation of species-specific genes and greater divergence in regulatory elements compared to other ants or Drosophila. Thus, while the "socio-genomes" of ants and the honeybee are broadly characterized by a pervasive pattern of divergence in gene composition and regulation, they preserve lineage-specific regulatory features linked to eusociality. We propose that changes in gene regulation played a key role in the origins of insect eusociality, whereas changes in gene composition were more relevant for lineage-specific eusocial adaptations.

  • Received January 24, 2013.
  • Accepted April 24, 2013.

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