The impact of P -Element-induced hybrid dysgenesis on the male germline in Drosophila simulans

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

The P-element, a DNA transposon, has independently invaded two Drosophila species, accompanied by rapid evolution of suppression. In the germline, suppression is mediated primarily by maternally expressed piRNAs, a class of regulatory small RNAs associated with PIWI proteins. The offspring of females that lack P-element-specific piRNAs and males that contain P-elements suffer a syndrome of deleterious phenotypes, including sterility, genome rearrangements, gonadal atrophy, and mutations, while the offspring of the reciprocal cross are normal. These effects, collectively termed hybrid dysgenesis, have been investigated primarily in female D. melanogaster . Here, we study hybrid dysgenesis in male D. simulans . Using an attached-X chromosome stock, we generated genetically identical F1 males that differed only in maternal suppression of the P-element. Using targeted sequencing of P-element breakpoints, we show that P-element transposition is elevated in dysgenic males and confirm a preference for insertion near origins of replication. Using transcriptomics, we show that dysgenic males have elevated P-element expression and reduced splicing suppression, with patterns of gene expression suggesting the loss of mature sperm cells. Fertility assays show higher rates of male sterility but otherwise modest effects on fertility. In conjunction with the transcriptomic data, small RNA sequencing confirms that the piRNA pathway functions in testes. Our results suggest that the P-element may spread more readily through males than females, as transposition rates are similar while fertility defects are less severe in males.

Summary

Transposable elements (TEs) are selfish genes that replicate independently of host genomes. Hosts produce piRNA molecules to suppress established TEs, but for new TEs, piRNAs are not available. This has strong negative consequences for females, but effects in males are unclear. The fly Drosophila simulans has recently acquired a TE, the P-element, and males from lines lacking P-element piRNAs suffer more P-element expression and replication than controls, leading to reduced expression of genes associated with mature sperm cells, and sometime sterility. Yet unsterilised males did not suffer fertility loss, suggesting that TEs may spread more easily in males than females.

Article activity feed