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Evolution of long centromeres in fire ants

Source Publication
BMC Evolutionary Biology
Date Issued
September 15, 2016
Author(s)
Huang, Yu-Ching
Lee, Chih-Chi
Kao, Chia-Yi
Chang, Ni-Chen
Lin, Chung-Chi
Shoemaker, DeWayne
Wang, John
DOI
10.1186/s12862-016-0760-7
Permanent URI
https://trace.tennessee.edu/handle/20.500.14382/17178
Abstract

Background: Centromeres are essential for accurate chromosome segregation, yet sequence conservation is low even among closely related species. Centromere drive predicts rapid turnover because some centromeric sequences may compete better than others during female meiosis. In addition to sequence composition, longer centromeres may have a transmission advantage.


Results: We report the first observations of extremely long centromeres, covering on average 34 % of the chromosomes, in the red imported fire ant Solenopsis invicta. By comparison, cytological examination of Solenopsis geminata revealed typical small centromeric constrictions. Bioinformatics and molecular analyses identified CenSol, the major centromeric satellite DNA repeat. We found that CenSol sequences are very similar between the two species but the CenSol copy number in S. invicta is much greater than that in S. geminata. In addition, centromere expansion in S. invicta is not correlated with the duplication of CenH3. Comparative analyses revealed that several closely related fire ant species also possess long centromeres.

Conclusions: Our results are consistent with a model of simple runaway centromere expansion due to centromere drive. We suggest expanded centromeres may be more prevalent in hymenopteran insects, which use haplodiploid sex determination, than previously considered.

Subjects

Centromere

Centromere drive

Solenopsis invicta

Solenopsis geminata

Fire ant

Disciplines
Life Sciences
Comments

This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0


International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

Recommended Citation
Huang, Y. C., Lee, C. C., Kao, C. Y., Chang, N. C., Lin, C. C., Shoemaker, D., & Wang, J. (2016). Evolution of long centromeres in fire ants. BMC Evolutionary Biology, 16(1), 189. Chicago
Submission Type
Publisher's Version
File(s)
Thumbnail Image
Name

BMCEvolutionary_2016_16_189.pdf

Size

1.91 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

67069d9310df63a98fd7301f7f479b22

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