Published July 9, 2021 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Genomic analyses of new genes and their phenotypic effects reveal rapid evolution of essential functions in Drosophila development

Description

It is a conventionally held dogma that the genetic basis underlying development is conserved in a long evolutionary time scale. Ample experiments based on mutational, biochemical, functional, and complementary knockdown/knockout approaches have revealed the unexpectedly important role of recently evolved new genes in the development of Drosophila. The recent progress in the genome-wide experimental testing of gene effects and improvements in the computational identification of new genes (< 40 million years ago, Mya) open the door to investigate the evolution of gene essentiality with a phylogenetically high resolution. These advancements also raised interesting issues in techniques and concepts related to phenotypic effect analyses of genes, particularly of those that recently originated. Here we reported our analyses of these issues, including reproducibility and efficiency of knockdown experiment and difference between RNAi libraries in the knockdown efficiency and testing of phenotypic effects. We further analyzed a large data from knockdowns of 11,354 genes (~75% of the Drosophila melanogaster total genes), including 702 new genes (~66% of the species total new genes that aged < 40 Mya), revealing a similarly high proportion (~32.2%) of essential genes that originated in various Sophophora subgenus lineages and distant ancestors beyond the Drosophila genus. The transcriptional compensation effect from CRISPR knockout were detected for highly similar duplicate copies. Knockout of a few young genes detected analogous essentiality in various functions in development. Taken together, our experimental and computational analyses provide valuable data for detection of phenotypic effects of genes in general and further strong evidence for the concept that new genes in Drosophila quickly evolved essential functions in viability during development.

Data availability

All relevant data are within the manuscript and its Supporting Information files.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pgen.1009654
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:5948

Funding

National Key R&D Program of China
2019YFA0802600
National Key R&D Program of China
2018YFC1406902
National Natural Science Foundation of China
91731302
National Natural Science Foundation of China
31771410
National Natural Science Foundation of China
31970565
National Science Foundation
1026200
National Institutes of Health
R01GM116113

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Ecology and Evolution