The Pogonomyrmex californicus social niche polymorphism is a polygenic trait involving a young supergene

bioRxiv(2022)

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摘要
Social insects vary considerably in their social organization both between and within species. In the California harvester ant, Pogonomyrmex californicus (Buckley 1867), colonies are commonly founded and headed by a single queen (haplometrosis, primary monogyny). However, in some populations in California (USA), unrelated queens cooperate not only during founding (pleometrosis) but throughout the life of the colony (primary polygyny). The genetic architecture and evolutionary dynamics of this complex social niche polymorphism (haplometrosis vs pleometrosis) have remained unknown. Here, we provide a first analysis of its genomic basis and evolutionary history. We discover a recently evolved (< 200 k years), 8 Mb non-recombining region segregating with the observed social niche polymorphism, showing characteristics of a supergene comparable to those underlying social polymorphisms in other ant species. However, we also find remarkable differences to the other so far described social supergenes. Particularly, four additional genomic regions not in linkage with the supergene show signatures of a selective sweep in the pleometrotic population. Within these regions, we find for example genes crucial for epigenetic regulation via histone modification (chameau) and DNA methylation (dnmt1). Our results suggest that social morph in this species is a polygenic trait including an incipient supergene that evolved less than 200 000 years ago.
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