Genomic and transcriptomic analyses of the subterranean termite <i>Reticulitermes speratus</i> : Gene duplication facilitates social evolution

Shuji Shigenobu(National Institute for Basic Biology), Yoshinobu Hayashi(Keio University), Dai Watanabe(Hokkaido University), Gaku Tokuda(University of the Ryukyus), Masaru Hojo(Kwansei Gakuin University), Kouhei Toga(Nihon University), Ryota Saiki(University of Toyama), Hajime Yaguchi(Kwansei Gakuin University), Yudai Masuoka(National Agriculture and Food Research Organization), Ryutaro Suzuki(University of Toyama), Shogo Suzuki(University of Toyama), Moe Kimura(University of Toyama), Masatoshi Matsunami(Hokkaido University), Yasuhiro Sugime(Hokkaido University), Kohei Oguchi(Hokkaido University), Teruyuki Niimi(National Institute for Basic Biology), Hiroki Gotoh(National Institute of Genetics), Masaru Hojo(Kwansei Gakuin University), Satoshi Miyazaki(Tamagawa University), Atsushi Toyoda(National Institute of Genetics), Toru Miura(Hokkaido University), Kiyoto Maekawa(University of Toyama)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
January 18, 2022
Cited by 77Open Access
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Abstract

genome. The duplicated genes comprised diverse categories related to social functions, including lipocalins (chemical communication), cellulases (wood digestion and social interaction), lysozymes (social immunity), geranylgeranyl diphosphate synthase (social defense), and a novel class of termite lineage-specific genes with unknown functions. Paralogous genes were often observed in tandem in the genome, but their expression patterns were highly variable, exhibiting caste biases. Some of the assayed duplicated genes were expressed in caste-specific organs, such as the accessory glands of the queen ovary and the frontal glands of soldier heads. We propose that gene duplication facilitates social evolution through regulatory diversification, leading to caste-biased expression and subfunctionalization and/or neofunctionalization conferring caste-specialized functions.


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