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Developmental plasticity shapes social traits and selection in a facultatively eusocial bee.

Karen M KapheimBeryl M JonesHailin PanCai LiBrock A HarpurClement F KentAmro ZayedPanagiotis IoannidisRobert M WaterhouseCallum KingwellEckart StolleArián AvalosGuojie ZhangW Owen McMillanWilliam T Wcislo
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2020)
Developmental plasticity generates phenotypic variation, but how it contributes to evolutionary change is unclear. Phenotypes of individuals in caste-based (eusocial) societies are particularly sensitive to developmental processes, and the evolutionary origins of eusociality may be rooted in developmental plasticity of ancestral forms. We used an integrative genomics approach to evaluate the relationships among developmental plasticity, molecular evolution, and social behavior in a bee species (Megalopta genalis) that expresses flexible sociality, and thus provides a window into the factors that may have been important at the evolutionary origins of eusociality. We find that differences in social behavior are derived from genes that also regulate sex differentiation and metamorphosis. Positive selection on social traits is influenced by the function of these genes in development. We further identify evidence that social polyphenisms may become encoded in the genome via genetic changes in regulatory regions, specifically in transcription factor binding sites. Taken together, our results provide evidence that developmental plasticity provides the substrate for evolutionary novelty and shapes the selective landscape for molecular evolution in a major evolutionary innovation: Eusociality.
Keyphrases
  • genome wide
  • dna methylation
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • transcription factor
  • copy number
  • single cell
  • gene expression
  • genome wide identification
  • genome wide analysis