Evolutionary Plasticity of Mating-Type Determination Mechanisms in Paramecium aurelia Sibling Species

Author:

Sawka-Gądek Natalia1,Potekhin Alexey2,Singh Deepankar Pratap3,Grevtseva Inessa2,Arnaiz Olivier4,Penel Simon5,Sperling Linda4,Tarcz Sebastian1,Duret Laurent5,Nekrasova Irina2,Meyer Eric3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Systematics and Evolution of Animals, Polish Academy of Sciences, Kraków, Poland

2. Department of Microbiology, Faculty of Biology, Saint Petersburg State University, Saint Petersburg, Russia

3. Institut de Biologie de l'Ecole Normale Supérieure (IBENS), Ecole Normale Supérieure, CNRS, INSERM, Université PSL, Paris, France

4. CEA, CNRS, Institute for Integrative Biology of the Cell (I2BC), Université Paris-Saclay, Gif-sur-Yvette, France

5. CNRS, Laboratoire de Biométrie et Biologie Evolutive UMR 5558, Université de Lyon, Villeurbanne, France

Abstract

Abstract The Paramecium aurelia complex, a group of morphologically similar but sexually incompatible sibling species, is a unique example of the evolutionary plasticity of mating-type systems. Each species has two mating types, O (Odd) and E (Even). Although O and E types are homologous in all species, three different modes of determination and inheritance have been described: genetic determination by Mendelian alleles, stochastic developmental determination, and maternally inherited developmental determination. Previous work in three species of the latter kind has revealed the key roles of the E-specific transmembrane protein mtA and its highly specific transcription factor mtB: type O clones are produced by maternally inherited genome rearrangements that inactivate either mtA or mtB during development. Here we show, through transcriptome analyses in five additional species representing the three determination systems, that mtA expression specifies type E in all cases. We further show that the Mendelian system depends on functional and nonfunctional mtA alleles, and identify novel developmental rearrangements in mtA and mtB which now explain all cases of maternally inherited mating-type determination. Epistasis between these genes likely evolved from less specific interactions between paralogs in the P. aurelia common ancestor, after a whole-genome duplication, but the mtB gene was subsequently lost in three P. aurelia species which appear to have returned to an ancestral regulation mechanism. These results suggest a model accounting for evolutionary transitions between determination systems, and highlight the diversity of molecular solutions explored among sibling species to maintain an essential mating-type polymorphism in cell populations.

Funder

National Science Centre

Russian Foundation for Basic Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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