TY - JOUR
T1 - Evolutionary transition of doublesex regulation from sex-specific splicing to male-specific transcription in termites
AU - Miyazaki, Satoshi
AU - Fujiwara, Kokuto
AU - Kai, Keima
AU - Masuoka, Yudai
AU - Gotoh, Hiroki
AU - Niimi, Teruyuki
AU - Hayashi, Yoshinobu
AU - Shigenobu, Shuji
AU - Maekawa, Kiyoto
N1 - Funding Information:
Christine A. Nalepa kindly provided us with Cryptocercus punctulatus and gave us valuable comments to the final version of our manuscript. Shutaro Hanmoto provided assistance with laboratory work. We thank Toru Miura, Masatoshi Matsunami, Dominic Evangelista, and an anonymous reviewer for their constructive suggestions regarding this study, and Functional Genomics Facility, NIBB Core Research Facilities for technical support. This study was partly supported by JSPS KAKENHI (Grant Numbers JP19K06860 to SM, JP20K06816 to YH, and JP19H03273 to KM) and by the NIBB Collaborative Research Program (Nos. 19-335 and 20-323).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, The Author(s).
PY - 2021/12
Y1 - 2021/12
N2 - The sex determination gene doublesex (dsx) encodes a transcription factor with two domains, oligomerization domain 1 (OD1) and OD2, and is present throughout insects. Sex-specific Dsx splicing isoforms regulate the transcription of target genes and trigger sex differentiation in all Holometabola examined to date. However, in some hemimetabolous insects, dsx is not spliced sexually and its sequence is less conserved. Here, to elucidate evolutionary changes in dsx in domain organisation and regulation in termites, we searched genome and/or transcriptome databases for the dsx OD1 and OD2 in seven termite species and their sister group (Cryptocercus woodroaches). Molecular phylogenetic and synteny analyses identified OD1 sequences of termites and C. punctulatus that clustered with dsx of Holometabola and regarded them as dsx orthologues. The Cryptocercus dsx orthologue containing OD2 was spliced sexually, as previously shown in other insects. However, OD2 was not found in all termite dsx orthologues. These orthologues were encoded by a single exon in three termites for which genome information is available; they were not alternatively spliced but transcribed in a male-specific manner in two examined species. Evolution of dsx regulation from sex-specific splicing to male-specific transcription may have occurred at an early stage of social evolution in termites.
AB - The sex determination gene doublesex (dsx) encodes a transcription factor with two domains, oligomerization domain 1 (OD1) and OD2, and is present throughout insects. Sex-specific Dsx splicing isoforms regulate the transcription of target genes and trigger sex differentiation in all Holometabola examined to date. However, in some hemimetabolous insects, dsx is not spliced sexually and its sequence is less conserved. Here, to elucidate evolutionary changes in dsx in domain organisation and regulation in termites, we searched genome and/or transcriptome databases for the dsx OD1 and OD2 in seven termite species and their sister group (Cryptocercus woodroaches). Molecular phylogenetic and synteny analyses identified OD1 sequences of termites and C. punctulatus that clustered with dsx of Holometabola and regarded them as dsx orthologues. The Cryptocercus dsx orthologue containing OD2 was spliced sexually, as previously shown in other insects. However, OD2 was not found in all termite dsx orthologues. These orthologues were encoded by a single exon in three termites for which genome information is available; they were not alternatively spliced but transcribed in a male-specific manner in two examined species. Evolution of dsx regulation from sex-specific splicing to male-specific transcription may have occurred at an early stage of social evolution in termites.
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U2 - 10.1038/s41598-021-95423-7
DO - 10.1038/s41598-021-95423-7
M3 - Article
C2 - 34362973
AN - SCOPUS:85112611533
SN - 2045-2322
VL - 11
JO - Scientific Reports
JF - Scientific Reports
IS - 1
M1 - 15992
ER -