Comparative genomics provides insights into molecular adaptation to hypermetamorphosis and cantharidin metabolism in blister beetles (Coleoptera: Meloidae)

Author:

RICCIERI Alessandra1ORCID,SPAGONI Lucrezia1ORCID,LI Ming2ORCID,FRANCHINI Paolo3ORCID,ROSSI Marianna N.1ORCID,FRATINI Emiliano4ORCID,CERVELLI Manuela15ORCID,BOLOGNA Marco A.16ORCID,MANCINI Emiliano7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sciences University of Roma Tre Roma Italy

2. Department of Biology University of Konstanz Konstanz Germany

3. Department of Ecological and Biological Sciences Tuscia University Viterbo Italy

4. Division of Health Protection Technologies Italian National Agency for Energy New Technologies and Sustainable Economic Development (ENEA) Roma Italy

5. Neurodevelopment, Neurogenetics and Molecular Neurobiology Unit IRCCS Fondazione Santa Lucia Roma Italy

6. National Biodiversity Future Center (NBFC) Università di Palermo Palermo Italy

7. Department of Biology and Biotechnologies “Charles Darwin” Sapienza University Roma Italy

Abstract

AbstractBlister beetles (Coleoptera: Meloidae) are currently subdivided into three subfamilies: Eleticinae (a basal group), Nemognathinae, and Meloinae. These are all characterized by the endogenous production of the defensive terpene cantharidin (CA), whereas the two most derived subfamilies show a hypermetamorphic larval development. Here, we provide novel draft genome assemblies of five species sampled across the three blister beetle subfamilies (Iselma pallidipennis, Stenodera caucasica, Zonitis immaculata, Lydus trimaculatus, and Mylabris variabilis) and performed a comparative analysis with other available Meloidae genomes and the closely‐related canthariphilous species (Pyrochroa serraticornis) to disclose adaptations at a molecular level. Our results highlighted the expansion and selection of genes potentially responsible for CA production and metabolism, as well as its mobilization and vesicular compartmentalization. Furthermore, we observed adaptive selection patterns and gain of genes devoted to epigenetic regulation, development, and morphogenesis, possibly related to hypermetamorphosis. We hypothesize that most genetic adaptations occurred to support both CA biosynthesis and hypermetamorphosis, two crucial aspects of Meloidae biology that likely contributed to their evolutionary success.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference53 articles.

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