Login / Signup

Macroevolutionary shifts of WntA function potentiate butterfly wing-pattern diversity.

Anyi Mazo-VargasCarolina ConchaLuca LivraghiDarli MassardoRichard W R WallbankLinlin ZhangJoseph D PapadorDaniel Martinez-NajeraChris D JigginsMarcus R KronforstCasper J BreukerRobert D ReedNipam H PatelW Owen McMillanArnaud Martin
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2017)
Butterfly wing patterns provide a rich comparative framework to study how morphological complexity develops and evolves. Here we used CRISPR/Cas9 somatic mutagenesis to test a patterning role for WntA, a signaling ligand gene previously identified as a hotspot of shape-tuning alleles involved in wing mimicry. We show that WntA loss-of-function causes multiple modifications of pattern elements in seven nymphalid butterfly species. In three butterflies with a conserved wing-pattern arrangement, WntA is necessary for the induction of stripe-like patterns known as symmetry systems and acquired a novel eyespot activator role specific to Vanessa forewings. In two Heliconius species, WntA specifies the boundaries between melanic fields and the light-color patterns that they contour. In the passionvine butterfly Agraulis, WntA removal shows opposite effects on adjacent pattern elements, revealing a dual role across the wing field. Finally, WntA acquired a divergent role in the patterning of interveinous patterns in the monarch, a basal nymphalid butterfly that lacks stripe-like symmetry systems. These results identify WntA as an instructive signal for the prepatterning of a biological system of exuberant diversity and illustrate how shifts in the deployment and effects of a single developmental gene underlie morphological change.
Keyphrases
  • crispr cas
  • transcription factor
  • immune response
  • dna methylation
  • toll like receptor