A first for science, the genome sequencing work is the product of an international group of researchers, dubbed the Heliconius Genome Consortium, who examined the genome of the Postman butterfly (Heliconius melpomene), a well-known species that lives in the Peruvian Amazon. Using that data as a guide, they then examined the genetic make-up of two other closely-related butterfly species – Heliconius timareta and Heliconius elevatus.
All three species were selected for the study because they each share similar color patterns on their wings as a way to ward off predators.
The Consortium’s surprising finding, as described in a paper published May 16 in Nature, is that the various species all look similar because they share the parts of their DNA that deal with color patterns.
“The results are significant because they represent the first conclusive demonstration that adaptive introgression, or interspecific gene flow, facilitates the establishment of novel mimetic wing patterns, which in turn has the potential to promote speciation,” says Mullen.
Boston University, along with the other senior consortium members, funded the data collection. Mullen was directly involved in the gene annotation process that supported the genome assembly and assisted in the writing and editing of the manuscript.
This landmark effort to sequence the genome of a South American butterfly has revealed the key behind its unusual ability to mimic other butterflies.
Heliconius butterflies exhibit an extraordinary amount of color-pattern mimicry between the species, and with species in other groups. Researchers have found that species share the parts of the genome that code for color pattern loci, with a major impact on the survival of these butterflies in the wild.
The genetic sharing between species, researchers believe, is the result of hybridization. Considered extremely rare, particularly in animals, hybridization occurs when insects of two different species interbreed in the wild.
The resulting hybrid offspring share traits with both mother and father. Though often considered evolutionary dead-end, hybrids occasionally interbreed with a parent species, in the process introducing new genes that can help populations adapt to new or changing environments.
“What we show is that one butterfly species can gain its protective colour pattern genes ready-made from a different species by hybridizing (or interbreeding) with it – a much faster process than having to evolve one's colour patterns from scratch,” says Kanchon Dasmahapatra, a postdoctoral researcher at the University College of London’s Department of Genetics, Evolution, and Environment, and a co-author of the paper.
“This project really changes how we think about adaptation in general,” says Marcus Kronforst, a Bauer Fellow at Harvard, who participated in the sequencing. “Evolutionary biologists often wonder whether different species use the same genes to generate similar traits, like the mimetic wing patterns of Heliconius butterflies. This study shows us that sometimes different species not only use the same genes, but the exact same stretches of DNA, which they pass around by hybridization.”
A total of 80 researchers in 32 research universities and institutions from eight countries worked on this genome project, while a subset of nine laboratories funded the sequencing of the 290 million DNA bases using new high-throughput technologies, allowing the work to proceed without major dedicated grant funding.
The nine laboratories that funded the sequencing work of the Heliconius Genome Consortium include:
• University College London, UK, and Harvard University, USA: James Mallet• University of Exeter, UK: Richard French-Constant• Harvard University, USA: Marcus Kronforst• Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris, France: Mathieu Joron• Boston University, USA: Sean Mullen• University of California at Irvine, USA: Robert Reed, Adriana Briscoe• University of Edinburgh, UK: Mark Blaxter• Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Panama: W. Owen McMillan• Cambridge University, UK: Chris Jiggins
Sequencing work for the Consortium was carried out at the Baylor College of Medicine, who performed the main reference sequence, and at the University of Edinburgh, GenePool, where the resequencing was performed.
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