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      A possible role of DNA methylation in functional divergence of a fast evolving duplicate gene encoding odorant binding protein 11 in the honeybee

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          Abstract

          Although gene duplication is seen as the main path to evolution of new functions, molecular mechanisms by which selection favours the gain versus loss of newly duplicated genes and minimizes the fixation of pseudo-genes are not well understood. Here, we investigate in detail a duplicate honeybee gene obp11 belonging to a fast evolving insect gene family encoding odorant binding proteins (OBPs). We report that obp11 is expressed only in female bees in rare antennal sensilla basiconica in contrast to its tandem partner obp10 that is expressed in the brain in both females and males (drones). Unlike all other obp genes in the honeybee, obp11 is methylated suggesting that functional diversification of obp11 and obp10 may have been driven by an epigenetic mechanism. We also show that increased methylation in drones near one donor splice site that correlates with higher abundance of a transcript variant encoding a truncated OBP11 protein is one way of controlling its contrasting expression. Our data suggest that like in mammals and plants, DNA methylation in insects may contribute to functional diversification of proteins produced from duplicated genes, in particular to their subfunctionalization by generating complementary patterns of expression.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Proc Biol Sci
          Proc. Biol. Sci
          RSPB
          royprsb
          Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
          The Royal Society
          0962-8452
          1471-2954
          29 June 2016
          : 283
          : 1833
          : 20160558
          Affiliations
          Research School of Biology, The Australian National University , Canberra, Australian Capital Territory 2601, Australia
          Author notes
          Article
          PMC4936032 PMC4936032 4936032 rspb20160558
          10.1098/rspb.2016.0558
          4936032
          27358363
          f64f02a7-379f-478f-a72a-09c4011d9648
          © 2016 The Author(s)

          Published by the Royal Society. All rights reserved.

          History
          : 9 March 2016
          : 9 June 2016
          Funding
          Funded by: Australian Research Council, http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100000923;
          Award ID: DP160103053
          Categories
          1001
          129
          70
          Research Articles
          Custom metadata
          June 29, 2016

          insect olfaction,epialleles,genome evolution, Apis mellifera ,insect epigenomics

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