The fire ant social chromosome supergene variant Sb shows low diversity but high divergence from SB

Mol Ecol. 2017 Jun;26(11):2864-2879. doi: 10.1111/mec.14054. Epub 2017 Apr 1.

Abstract

Variation in social behaviour is common, yet little is known about the genetic architectures underpinning its evolution. A rare exception is in the fire ant Solenopsis invicta: Alternative variants of a supergene region determine whether a colony will have exactly one or up to dozens of queens. The two variants of this region are carried by a pair of 'social chromosomes', SB and Sb, which resemble a pair of sex chromosomes. Recombination is suppressed between the two chromosomes in the supergene region. While the X-like SB can recombine with itself in SB/SB queens, recombination is effectively absent in the Y-like Sb because Sb/Sb queens die before reproducing. Here, we analyse whole-genome sequences of eight haploid SB males and eight haploid Sb males. We find extensive SB-Sb differentiation throughout the >19-Mb-long supergene region. We find no evidence of 'evolutionary strata' with different levels of divergence comparable to those reported in several sex chromosomes. A high proportion of substitutions between the SB and Sb haplotypes are nonsynonymous, suggesting inefficacy of purifying selection in Sb sequences, similar to that for Y-linked sequences in XY systems. Finally, we show that the Sb haplotype of the supergene region has 635-fold less nucleotide diversity than the rest of the genome. We discuss how this reduction could be due to a recent selective sweep affecting Sb specifically or associated with a population bottleneck during the invasion of North America by the sampled population.

Keywords: Solenopsis invicta; diversity in supergene variants; evolutionary strata; queen number in ants; social chromosomes.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Ants / genetics*
  • Chromosomes / genetics*
  • Genes, Insect*
  • Genetic Variation*
  • Haploidy
  • Male
  • North America
  • Sequence Analysis, DNA
  • Social Behavior*