首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
检索        


The genome of the fire ant Solenopsis invicta
Authors:Wurm Yannick  Wang John  Riba-Grognuz Oksana  Corona Miguel  Nygaard Sanne  Hunt Brendan G  Ingram Krista K  Falquet Laurent  Nipitwattanaphon Mingkwan  Gotzek Dietrich  Dijkstra Michiel B  Oettler Jan  Comtesse Fabien  Shih Cheng-Jen  Wu Wen-Jer  Yang Chin-Cheng  Thomas Jerome  Beaudoing Emmanuel  Pradervand Sylvain  Flegel Volker  Cook Erin D  Fabbretti Roberto  Stockinger Heinz  Long Li  Farmerie William G  Oakey Jane  Boomsma Jacobus J  Pamilo Pekka  Yi Soojin V  Heinze Jürgen  Goodisman Michael A D  Farinelli Laurent  Harshman Keith  Hulo Nicolas  Cerutti Lorenzo  Xenarios Ioannis  Shoemaker Dewayne  Keller Laurent
Institution:Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Lausanne, 1015 Lausanne, Switzerland. yannick.wurm@unil.ch
Abstract:Ants have evolved very complex societies and are key ecosystem members. Some ants, such as the fire ant Solenopsis invicta, are also major pests. Here, we present a draft genome of S. invicta, assembled from Roche 454 and Illumina sequencing reads obtained from a focal haploid male and his brothers. We used comparative genomic methods to obtain insight into the unique features of the S. invicta genome. For example, we found that this genome harbors four adjacent copies of vitellogenin. A phylogenetic analysis revealed that an ancestral vitellogenin gene first underwent a duplication that was followed by possibly independent duplications of each of the daughter vitellogenins. The vitellogenin genes have undergone subfunctionalization with queen- and worker-specific expression, possibly reflecting differential selection acting on the queen and worker castes. Additionally, we identified more than 400 putative olfactory receptors of which at least 297 are intact. This represents the largest repertoire reported so far in insects. S. invicta also harbors an expansion of a specific family of lipid-processing genes, two putative orthologs to the transformer/feminizer sex differentiation gene, a functional DNA methylation system, and a single putative telomerase ortholog. EST data indicate that this S. invicta telomerase ortholog has at least four spliceforms that differ in their use of two sets of mutually exclusive exons. Some of these and other unique aspects of the fire ant genome are likely linked to the complex social behavior of this species.
Keywords:social insect  caste differences  nonmodel organism  de novo genome assembly
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号