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The nonA Gene in Drosophila Conveys Species-Specific Behavioral Characteristics
Susanna Campesana, Yuri Dubrovaa, Jeffrey C. Hallb, and Charalambos P. Kyriacouaa Department of Genetics, University of Leicester, Leicester LE1 7RH, United Kingdom
b Department of Biology, Brandeis University, Waltham, Massachusetts 02254
Corresponding author: Charalambos P. Kyriacou, Room 141, Adrian Bldg., Department of Genetics, University of Leicester, University Rd., Leicester LE1 7RH, United Kingdom., cpk{at}leicester.ac.uk (E-mail)
Communicating editor: J. J. LOROS
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
The molecular basis of species-specific differences in courtship behavior, a critical factor in preserving species boundaries, is poorly understood. Genetic analysis of all but the most closely related species is usually impossible, given the inviability of hybrids. We have therefore applied interspecific transformation of a single candidate behavioral locus, no-on-transient A (nonA), between Drosophila virilis and D. melanogaster, to investigate whether nonA, like the period gene, might encode species-specific behavioral information. Mutations in nonA can disrupt both visual behavior and the courtship song in D. melanogaster. The lovesong of nonAdiss mutant males superficially resembles that of D. virilis, a species that diverged from D. melanogaster 4060 mya. Transformation of the cloned D. virilis nonA gene into D. melanogaster hosts carrying a synthetic deletion of the nonA locus restored normal visual function (the phenotype most sensitive to nonA mutation). However, the courtship song of transformant males showed several features characteristic of the corresponding D. virilis signal, indicating that nonA can act as a reservoir for species-specific information. This candidate gene approach, together with interspecific transformation, can therefore provide a direct avenue to explore potential speciation genes in genetically and molecularly tractable organisms such as Drosophila.
THE results of many years of experiments, in which closely related species have been crossed together to detect the genetic architecture of species-specific characters, have usually detected an underlying polygenic system (reviewed in ![]()
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A single gene is therefore capable of acting as a reservoir for species-specific information and raises the question of how general this phenomenon might be. Stripped of the cumbersome burden of interspecific genetics, transformation of single genes between species could reveal, as in the case of per, a rather simpler deterministic picture of species-specific behavior than otherwise believed. Consequently, we have decided to extend this approach to another "candidate" locus.
The no-on-transientA (nonA) gene from Drosophila encodes a putative RNA-binding protein, but its function at the biochemical level is unknown (![]()
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TG, whose males have song rhythms that are characteristic of wild-type D. simulans (![]()
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The cloning and sequencing of the D. virilis nonA orthologue has been described, as has the transformation of the D. virilis nonA transgene (nonAvir) into D. melanogaster nonA- mutants and the associated full rescue of the mutants' poor viability and abnormal electroretinogram (ERG; ![]()
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| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
Fly strains:
T(1:4)9e2-10/FM7:
This strain carries a reciprocal translocation T(1:4), which uncovers the nonA gene and the adjacent essential locus l(1)i19e (![]()
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P[(ry) 235R11]:
This is a transformant strain carrying an 11-kb EcoRI fragment (homozygous on the third chromosome) that encodes both the D. melanogaster nonA locus and the adjacent lethal gene l(1)i19e (![]()
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The negative control was provided by nonAdiss/Y males, which were taken from a nonAdiss/FM7a ; ry 506/MKRS strain, which was repeatedly backcrossed to Canton-S, and the nonAdiss mutants re-extracted by selecting for males with the mutant song phenotype. A similar high level of congenicity was maintained between all the genotypes to be compared by prior crossing of all transformant individuals (see below) to a Cantonized w strain.
Transformant lines:
A number of lines were generated that carried a large genomic fragment from the D. virilis nonA region (![]()
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Courtship song:
Males were recorded for 10 min while in the presence of virgin females at a temperature of 25°26°, using an electret condenser microphone (![]()
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Optomotor test:
Three- to 8-day-old flies were dark-adapted for 4 hr and each fly tested individually for its turning behavior in a moving visual field of alternating black and white stripes (![]()
| RESULTS |
|---|
Optomotor behavior:
The walking optomotor response is a sensitive test of the fly's capacity to follow movements of the visual environment and reflects more central aspects of the functioning of the visual system than the ERG (![]()
Fig 2 reveals that the wider (larger) stripes generally gave more turning errors. Analysis of variance revealed a significant genotype effect (F = 5.96, P << 0.0001, d.f. 17,324), stripe width (F = 10.33, P = 0.0014, d.f. 1324), and a marginally significant genotype x stripe interaction (F = 1.71, d.f. 17,324, P = 0.039). Each vir/d transformant line gave a significantly higher number of correct turning responses than the nonAdiss mutants, which turn at random, generating an average of 10 correct responses out of 20 (P << 0.0001, Newman-Keuls a posteriori procedure). The mel/d transformant males rescue the optomotor response to a level similar to that of Canton-S with only lines 191/d and the partial hybrids 168/m having significantly poorer scores than mel/d (P = 0.038, 0.007, respectively). Consequently, the overall conclusion is that the optomotor defect associated with nonA mutants appears to be rescued in the great majority of vir/d lines to a level indistinguishable from that of mel/d.
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Song analysis:
All mutant nonA transgenes so far examined either affect vision only, or vision and song, but never song only (![]()
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It became clear during song recording that the vigor with which flies sang during the 10-min observation period was very different, one fly producing 15 sec of song and another 171 sec, representing the two extremes. A correlation matrix was generated between each song parameter, CPP, bCPP, PF, bPF, and IPI, and the amount of song generated (pulse plus hum song), but this did not reveal any consistent relationship for any of the 19 genotypes, in that the correlation could be positive or negative and usually not significant (data not shown). However, the correlations between the amount of song produced and PF were always negative, but only in one case (mel + 2vir) was it significant. Nevertheless, PF was corrected for the different amounts of song by analysis of covariance (ANCOVA).
CPP distributions:
One way of examining whether the nonAvir transformants showed a complete rescue of the nonA mutant song phenotype is to examine overall CPP distributions. Fig 3A shows the results of the CPP distributions for males carrying a single copy of nonA; the nonAdiss males have a long tail in CPP frequency distribution but their modal value is 2, reflecting the mutants' developing polycyclicity as the song burst progresses (see also Fig 1). D. virilis males, on the other hand, have a distribution that is more normally distributed around a modal value of 4.5 CPP. The mel/d males have 95% of their pulses spread between 1, 1.5, and 2 CPP, with 35% having 1 CPP (see Fig 3A). Of the seven vir/d lines examined, six had modal values of 2 or 2.5, with one (97/d) having a modal value of 1.5 (Fig 3A). We examined the skew and kurtosis values for CPP for these genotypes by grouping together individual lines of vir/d after first checking the homogeneity of these lines with a Kruskal-Wallis test. Kolmogorov-Smirnov comparisons revealed that for kurtosis, the vir/d distributions differed significantly from mel/d (P < 0.05) and from nonAdiss (P < 0.001), but not from D. virilis (Fig 3A). In contrast, kurtosis in the partial hybrid vir/m group did not differ from control line me1/d, but was significantly different from D. virilis (P < 0.05) and from nonAdiss (P < 0.001). Therefore, this initial analysis of CPP distributions shows the vir/d lines to be more similar to D. virilis than to D. melanogaster (mel/d) and with no evidence for mutant CPP (>4) in any of the vir/d lines.
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CPP regression on pulse position:
Another way of describing song characteristics is to examine the CPP regression in song bursts. Mutant nonAdiss songs generally show a steep positive slope (bCPP) in longer song bursts with pulses become increasingly polycyclic (![]()
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From the regressions we calculated the value of CPP at the first pulse (CPP1 in Fig 3C. Analysis of the transformant lines only revealed a highly significant genotype effect (F = 15.5, d.f. 16,149, P << 0.001). Planned comparison of mel/d vs. the vir/d values was highly significant (mel/d = 1.607, vir/d = 1.826; F = 16.4, d.f. 1149, P << 0.001). From Fig 3C it is clear that CPP1 values are significantly higher for most of the vir/d lines compared with me1/d (Newman-Keuls tests showed significant differences for lines 67-4/d, 168-8/d, 135/d, and 297-6/d compared with mel/d). Furthermore, partial hybrids vir/m also have significantly higher CPP1 values compared with vir/d lines (vir/m = 1.93; F = 14.87, d.f. 1149, P << 0.001). In general (with the exception of line 135), each individual partial vir/m hybrid line bears a higher CPP1 value than its vir/d corresponding counterpart (Fig 3C), possibly suggesting a dosage effect caused by carrying two nonA genes. However, comparing mel/d scores with 2mel and 3mel does not reveal any linear effect on CPP with increasing nonA dose (Fig 3C). Thus the vir/m values suggest a semidominant effect of adding the virilis copy of nonA to that of D. melanogaster (see DISCUSSION).
The three analyses of CPP described above reveal no convincing evidence that the vir/d transformants show characteristics that may reflect an incomplete rescue of the song phenotype. In contrast, they appear to share features of the D. virilis song.
PF regression on pulse position:
As a possible further indicator of the completeness of the rescue by nonAvir we examined PF using a least-squares regression as with CPP. Five out of 10 nonAdiss mutant males showed a significant regression, 2 positive but 3 negative, with a mean slope (bPF) of 0.155 (Fig 3D). D. virilis songs were similar to the mutants in this respect, with 1 out of 10 males having a significant negative slope, giving a mean slope for the group of -0.63 (Fig 3D). The vast majority of flies in the other genotypes gave significant negative slopes, revealing that intrapulse frequency is systematically decreased during a song burst (![]()
As a further measure of intrapulse frequency, we calculated PF at the first pulse position in a burst (PF1) using the regression equation, then performed ANCOVA using the amount of song as covariate (see MATERIALS AND METHODS), which revealed a highly significant effect (F = 18.8, d.f. = 18,166, P << 0.001). The adjusted PF1 values revealed that nonAdiss has significantly lower frequencies of 250 Hz compared to the D. virilis value of 410 Hz (P < 0.01 by Newman-Keuls), whereas all the other genotypes gave adjusted PF1 values between 290 and 360 Hz that were significantly higher than nonAdiss (P < 0.05), but significantly lower than D. virilis (P < 0.05). We conclude that the vir/d transformants show no evidence for a lowered PF that might be indicative of incomplete rescue of the song phenotype.
IPI:
Mean IPI values of nonAdiss males are 41 msec and higher than those of mel/d males by
4 msec (Fig 3E). D. virilis males have very short IPIs of
17 msec. The vir/d lines showed significantly lower IPIs than mel/d (vir/d = 35.06 msec, mel/d = 36.67 msec; F = 5.3, d.f. 1167, P = 0.023), although in only two individual lines, 168-8/d and 135/d, was this significant by a posteriori comparison. Each partial hybrid line also showed higher IPIs than its vir/d counterpart (Fig 3E, F = 83.3, d.f. 1167, P << 0.001). There was an apparent dosage effect in that 3mel had significantly higher IPI than mel/d (Fig 3E, P < 0.01), with 2mel males having intermediate scores. These results were unexpected and suggest that the nonAvir gene may have shortened IPI in the transformants, raising the possibility that nonA might carry species-specific IPI information. IPI values, as measured peak to peak, will be affected by the pulse pattern, which includes the variables that have been examined (CPP, bCPP, PF, and bPF). Consequently, we performed ANCOVA for IPI in which these four characteristics were covariates. The resultant F-ratio was also significant (F = 22.1, d.f. 18,163, P << 0.001) with the only major change from the previous analysis being that the adjusted IPI value for nonAdiss was slightly, but not significantly, lower that that of mel/d. Therefore, if degeneration of pulse pattern of the mutant is taken into account (reflected in its abnormal values of CPP, bCPP, PF, and bPF), the nonAdiss IPI is actually very similar to that of the wild type. However, every vir/d line still maintained a lower IPI than mel/d, which is surprising because vir/d males have higher values of CPP and bCPP, lower PF1 values, and generally more negative bPF. All these factors will serve to increase the duration of a pulse and thereby should indirectly increase IPI because of the way it was measured (peak to peak). Thus the lower IPIs of vir/d compared to mel/d suggest that the virilis transgene is playing an active role in reducing IPIs.
Multivariate analysis:
So far, all the analyses have used a single variable, compared between genotypes. To compare genotypes using all the data simultaneously, a multivariate method, discriminant analysis, was performed with the song characters bCPP, CPP, bPF, PF, and IPI using SYSTAT 7.0 software. All transformant lines were treated individually, and the results for all 19 groups are shown in Fig 4A. An extremely low probability of misclassification of groups is provided by Wilks'
of 0.002 (F = 21.7, d.f. 90,790, P << 0.00001). Factor 1 accounts for >80% of the variance, which is primarily generated by the difference between D. virilis songs and the rest. Factor 2 (nearly 10%) is generated largely by the difference between nonAdiss males and the other genotypes. All five song characters contribute significantly (P << 0.0001) to the discrimination between groups.
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Clearly, the difference between D. virilis and the other genotypes is so large that any differences between the transformants are "swamped." We therefore analyzed the transformants only. Lines 113, 67-4, and 168-8, which may have lost some 3' regulatory material (![]()
= 0.108, F = 5.49, d.f. 50,436, P << 0.0001), with all song characters contributing significantly to the discrimination (P < 0.0001). Fig 4B reveals that the vir/d lines (297/d, 135/d, 191/d, and 97/d) cluster away from the other lines on factor 1, which contributes 62% of the variance. A dosage effect is observed on factor 2 (21.4% of variance) for those flies carrying one, two, or three doses of D. melanogaster nonA, which is not reflected in the vir/m and mel + 2vir comparison. As the vir/m partial hybrids (lines 97/m, 135/m, 112/m, and mel + 2vir) have factor 1 values similar to the melanogaster nonA carriers (mel/d or 1mel, 2mel, and 3mel), the melanogaster nonA gene appears to be dominant with regard to factor 1.
Finally, we took each vir/d transformant line and compared it directly with its corresponding partial vir/m hybrid. In each of the five comparisons, involving lines 113, 135, 168-8, 67-4, and 97, there was almost no overlap between each pair of genotypes on factor 1. Wilks'
was significant for all comparisons (P between 0.029 and << 0.0001). All CPP values contributed significantly to the discrimination of each pair, as did IPI in all but one line (line 97, P = 0.06). The other song characters, bCPP, PF, and bPF, contributed sporadically in only one or two pairings. To sum up, the multivariate analyses have buttressed the results of the univariate methods, in that they clearly show a difference between the song characteristics of the vir/d transformants and those flies carrying melanogaster nonA genes.
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
The courtship song of the nonAdiss mutant male shows some similarities to that of D. virilis, in that pulses are polycyclic. Our study has shown that this superficial similarity runs somewhat deeper, in that the D. virilis song burst also shows the same pattern of progressive polycyclicity as the mutant. The site of the nonAdiss mutation, in which an asparagine is substituted by cysteine (![]()
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Mutational analysis of nonA has revealed that the first RNA recognition domain (RRM1) in nonA is absolutely necessary for all the known functions of NONA, whereas mutations such as nonAdiss, which lie in the C-terminal charged region, not only cause severe defects in both visual and song phenotypes, but also invariably reduce the viability of the affected flies (![]()
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This pattern of defects, observed in nonA mutants described above, is thus extremely helpful for interpreting the behavioral results from the nonAvir transformants. If nonAvir is indeed generating a slightly mutant song phenotype in melanogaster hosts due to incomplete rescue, rather than a species-specific transfer of behavioral information, then we would predict that vision should be disrupted, as "vision is the first to go" in mutants (![]()
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These modest effects of the nonAvir transgene in heterospecific hosts may occur because nonA is genuinely one of a number of genes that are involved in species-specific behavioral differences. Any nonAvir-determined adaptive changes that have occurred in the courtship song during the 4060 million years since the two species have been separated (![]()
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We thus conclude that nonA carries species-specific song information for both pulse pattern and IPIs. This situation differs from that of the per gene, whose coding region controls the species specificity of both locomotor activity patterns and lovesong cycles in an all-or-none manner (![]()
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How might the nonAvir gene be mediating these effects in the transformants? The NONA protein does have characteristics of a "housekeeping" gene in that it is expressed ubiquitously during development and some nonA mutations can produce an almost lethal phenotype (![]()
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Such a speculative but seductive scenario would have nonA as a regulator (perhaps via splicing) of a downstream gene, such as the Dmca1A locus, which encodes a voltage-gated calcium channel and displays a complicated pattern of alternative splicing (![]()
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In summary, the interspecific transformation of candidate genes is a more direct method of investigating species-specific characteristics than the reliance on hybridization between closely related species, the subsequent genetic analysis (if possible), and the subsequent laborious molecular work for identifying the relevant loci. Focusing on closely related species that are able to hybridize also limits the analysis, because only recent genetic variation will be scanned. In the case of nonA, transformation of the gene from D. virilis to D. melanogaster, two species that cannot hybridize, reveals the subtle behavioral effects of ancient genetic changes in the locus that must have occurred up to 60 mya.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
We thank Martin Couchman for computing assistance. S.C. was supported by a grant from the Human Frontiers Science Program and European Union predoctoral fellowship. Y.D. was supported by the Wellcome Trust.
Manuscript received January 3, 2001; Accepted for publication May 4, 2001.
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