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Recurrent Modification of a Conserved Cis-Regulatory Element Underlies Fruit Fly Pigmentation Diversity
Authors
A Kopp
A Kopp
+84 more
A Kopp
A Robertson
A Robertson
AC Groth
AG Clark
AP McGregor
B Prud'homme
BS Baker
C Tournamille
CA Russo
CI Swanson
CJ Cretekos
D Emera
D Godt
D Stanojevic
David J. Tacy
DL Stern
E Abouheif
E Sucena
Eric M. Camino
FC Jones
GA Wray
GA Wray
J Crocker
J Zhang
J-L Couderc
JE Pool
Joseph R. Salomone
JW Thornton
KJT Venken
Kristen A. Davis
L Arnoult
M Brudno
M Levine
M Rebeiz
M Rebeiz
M Rebeiz
Mark Rebeiz
MD Shapiro
ME Protas
MI Arnone
Michael Levine
MJ Harms
MW Nachman
MZ Ludwig
MZ Ludwig
MZ Ludwig
N Frankel
N Frankel
N Gompel
N Gompel
NI Mundy
P Andolfatto
PJ Wittkopp
PJ Wittkopp
R Parkash
R Parkash
R Staden
RD Bickel
S Bonn
S Jeong
S Jeong
S Marcellini
S Prabhakar
S Richards
S Shim
S Small
SA Tishkoff
SB Carroll
SC Ekker
SE Erdman
T Werner
TF Cooper
Thomas M. Williams
TM Williams
TR Shirangi
W Stephan
W Wang
WA Rogers
William A. Rogers
X Wang
Y Shen
Y Zhen
YF Chan
Publication date
1 August 2013
Publisher
'Public Library of Science (PLoS)'
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
The development of morphological traits occurs through the collective action of networks of genes connected at the level of gene expression. As any node in a network may be a target of evolutionary change, the recurrent targeting of the same node would indicate that the path of evolution is biased for the relevant trait and network. Although examples of parallel evolution have implicated recurrent modification of the same gene and cis-regulatory element (CRE), little is known about the mutational and molecular paths of parallel CRE evolution. In Drosophila melanogaster fruit flies, the Bric-à-brac (Bab) transcription factors control the development of a suite of sexually dimorphic traits on the posterior abdomen. Female-specific Bab expression is regulated by the dimorphic element, a CRE that possesses direct inputs from body plan (ABD-B) and sex-determination (DSX) transcription factors. Here, we find that the recurrent evolutionary modification of this CRE underlies both intraspecific and interspecific variation in female pigmentation in the melanogaster species group. By reconstructing the sequence and regulatory activity of the ancestral Drosophila melanogaster dimorphic element, we demonstrate that a handful of mutations were sufficient to create independent CRE alleles with differing activities. Moreover, intraspecific and interspecific dimorphic element evolution proceeded with little to no alterations to the known body plan and sex-determination regulatory linkages. Collectively, our findings represent an example where the paths of evolution appear biased to a specific CRE, and drastic changes in function were accompanied by deep conservation of key regulatory linkages. © 2013 Rogers et al
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