Sex-linked gene traffic underlies the acquisition of sexually dimorphic UV color vision in Heliconius butterflies

Author:

Chakraborty Mahul12ORCID,Lara Angelica Guadalupe1,Dang Andrew1,McCulloch Kyle J.13,Rainbow Dylan1ORCID,Carter David4,Ngo Luna Thanh1,Solares Edwin1ORCID,Said Iskander5,Corbett-Detig Russell B.5ORCID,Gilbert Lawrence E.6ORCID,Emerson J. J.1ORCID,Briscoe Adriana D.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Irvine, CA 92697

2. Department of Biology, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX 77843

3. Department of Ecology, Evolution and Behavior, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN 55108

4. Department of Molecular, Cell and Systems Biology, University of California, Riverside, CA 92521

5. Department of Biomolecular Engineering and Genomics Institute, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA 95064

6. Department of Integrative Biology, University of Texas, Austin, TX 78712

Abstract

The acquisition of novel sexually dimorphic traits poses an evolutionary puzzle: How do new traits arise and become sex-limited? Recently acquired color vision, sexually dimorphic in animals like primates and butterflies, presents a compelling model for understanding how traits become sex-biased. For example, some Heliconius butterflies uniquely possess UV (ultraviolet) color vision, which correlates with the expression of two differentially tuned UV-sensitive rhodopsins, UVRh1 and UVRh2. To discover how such traits become sexually dimorphic, we studied Heliconius charithonia , which exhibits female-specific UVRh1 expression. We demonstrate that females, but not males, discriminate different UV wavelengths. Through whole-genome shotgun sequencing and assembly of the H. charithonia genome, we discovered that UVRh1 is present on the W chromosome, making it obligately female-specific. By knocking out UVRh1 , we show that UVRh1 protein expression is absent in mutant female eye tissue, as in wild-type male eyes. A PCR survey of UVRh1 sex-linkage across the genus shows that species with female-specific UVRh1 expression lack UVRh1 gDNA in males. Thus, acquisition of sex linkage is sufficient to achieve female-specific expression of UVRh1 , though this does not preclude other mechanisms, like cis -regulatory evolution from also contributing. Moreover, both this event, and mutations leading to differential UV opsin sensitivity, occurred early in the history of Heliconius . These results suggest a path for acquiring sexual dimorphism distinct from existing mechanistic models. We propose a model where gene traffic to heterosomes (the W or the Y) genetically partitions a trait by sex before a phenotype shifts (spectral tuning of UV sensitivity).

Funder

National Science Foundation

HHS | National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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