Assogba, BS, Milesi, P, Djogbénou, LS, Berthomieu, A, Makoundou, P, Baba-Moussa, LS, Fiston-Lavier, A, Belkir, K, Labbé, P, Weill, M and Belkhir, K. 2017. Data from: The ace-1 locus is amplified in all resistant Anopheles gambiae mosquitoes: fitness consequences of homogeneous and heterogeneous duplications. [Online]. Dryad. Available from: https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.4f7qg
Assogba, BS, Milesi, P, Djogbénou, LS, Berthomieu, A, Makoundou, P, Baba-Moussa, LS, Fiston-Lavier, A, Belkir, K, Labbé, P, Weill, M and Belkhir, K. Data from: The ace-1 locus is amplified in all resistant Anopheles gambiae mosquitoes: fitness consequences of homogeneous and heterogeneous duplications. [Internet]. Dryad; 2017. Available from: https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.4f7qg
Assogba, BS, Milesi, P, Djogbénou, LS, Berthomieu, A, Makoundou, P, Baba-Moussa, LS, Fiston-Lavier, A, Belkir, K, Labbé, P, Weill, M and Belkhir, K (2017). Data from: The ace-1 locus is amplified in all resistant Anopheles gambiae mosquitoes: fitness consequences of homogeneous and heterogeneous duplications. [Data Collection]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.4f7qg
Description
Gene copy-number variations are widespread in natural populations, but investigating their phenotypic consequences requires contemporary duplications under selection. Such duplications have been found at the ace-1 locus (encoding the organophosphate and carbamate insecticides’ target) in the mosquito Anopheles gambiae (the major malaria vector); recent studies have revealed their intriguing complexity, consistent with the involvement of various numbers and types (susceptible or resistant to insecticide) of copies. We used an integrative approach, from genome to phenotype level, to investigate the influence of duplication architecture and gene-dosage on mosquito fitness. We found that both heterogeneous (i.e., one susceptible and one resistant ace-1 copy) and homogeneous (i.e., identical resistant copies) duplications segregated in field populations. The number of copies in homogeneous duplications was variable and positively correlated with acetylcholinesterase activity and resistance level. Determining the genomic structure of the duplicated region revealed that, in both types of duplication, ace-1 and 11 other genes formed tandem 203kb amplicons. We developed a diagnostic test for duplications, which showed that ace-1 was amplified in all 173 resistant mosquitoes analyzed (field-collected in several African countries), in heterogeneous or homogeneous duplications. Each type was associated with different fitness trade-offs: heterogeneous duplications conferred an intermediate phenotype (lower resistance and fitness costs), whereas homogeneous duplications tended to increase both resistance and fitness cost, in a complex manner. The type of duplication selected seemed thus to depend on the intensity and distribution of selection pressures. This versatility of trade-offs available through gene duplication highlights the importance of large mutation events in adaptation to environmental variation. This impressive adaptability could have a major impact on vector control in Africa.
Data capture method | Unknown |
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Date (Date published in a 3rd party system) | July 2017 |
Language(s) of written materials | English |
Data Creators | Assogba, BS, Milesi, P, Djogbénou, LS, Berthomieu, A, Makoundou, P, Baba-Moussa, LS, Fiston-Lavier, A, Belkir, K, Labbé, P, Weill, M and Belkhir, K |
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LSHTM Faculty/Department | MRC Unit The Gambia at LSHTM > GM-Laboratory Management |
Participating Institutions | London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom |
Date Deposited | 03 Apr 2024 13:40 |
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Last Modified | 10 Apr 2024 17:27 |
Publisher | Dryad |