Colour polymorphism associated with a gene duplication in male wood tiger moths
Abstract
Colour is often used as an aposematic warning signal, with predator learning expected to lead to a single colour pattern within a population. However, there are many puzzling cases where aposematic signals are also polymorphic. The wood tiger moth, Arctia plantaginis, displays bright hindwing colours associated with unpalatability, and males have discrete colour morphs which vary in frequency between localities. In Finland, both white and yellow morphs can be found, and these colour morphs also differ in behavioural and life-history traits. Here, we show that male colour is linked to an extra copy of a yellow family gene that is only present in the white morphs. This white-specific duplication, which we name valkea, is highly upregulated during wing development. CRISPR targeting valkea resulted in editing of both valkea and its paralog, yellow-e, and led to the production of yellow wings. We also characterise the pigments responsible for yellow, white and black colouration, showing that yellow is partly produced by pheomelanins, while black is dopamine-derived eumelanin. Our results add to a growing number of studies on the genetic architecture of complex and seemingly paradoxical polymorphisms, and the role of gene duplications and structural variation in adaptive evolution.
Main Authors
Format
Articles
Research article
Published
2023
Series
Subjects
Publication in research information system
Publisher
eLife Sciences Publications
The permanent address of the publication
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-202311107909Käytä tätä linkitykseen.
Review status
Peer reviewed
ISSN
2050-084X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.80116
Language
English
Published in
eLife
Citation
- Brien, M. N., Orteu, A., Yen, E. C., Galarza, J. A., Kirvesoja, J., Pakkanen, H., Wakamatsu, K., Jiggins, C. D., & Mappes, J. (2023). Colour polymorphism associated with a gene duplication in male wood tiger moths. eLife, 12, Article e80116. https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.80116
Funder(s)
Research Council of Finland
Funding program(s)
Academy Programme, AoF
Akatemiaohjelma, SA
![Research Council of Finland Research Council of Finland](/jyx/themes/jyx/images/funders/sa_logo.jpg?_=1739278984)
Additional information about funding
This work was supported by Academy of Finland grants to MB (#343356) and JM (projects 345091 and 328474), and a BBSRC grant to CJ (046_BB_V0145X_1).
Copyright© 2023 the Authors