Genome-wide survey of open chromatin regions in two swallowtail butterflies Papilio machaon and P. bianor

Wen ting Wan, Ping Hu, Zhou Chang, Yan dong Ren, Zhi wei Dong, Jie Yang, Xiang yu Pan, Jin wu He, Wei Liu, Gui chun Liu, Ruo ping Zhao, Chu yang Mao, Jun Li, Wen Wang, Xue yan Li

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

Papilio machaon was assigned as the type species for all butterflies by Linnaeus and P. bianor is a congener but exhibits a great difference in morphology (especially larva and adult color pattern) and larval host plants from P. machaon. Thus, they are the ideal models to investigate genetic mechanisms underlying morphology and plasticity between congeners. The reference genomes of both species were dissected in our previous studies, but little is known about their regulatory genome and the epigenetic regulation of gene expression throughout developmental stages. Here, we profiled the chromatin accessibility and gene expression of three developmental stages (the 4th instar larva [L4], the 5th instar larva [L5], and pupa [P]) using transposase accessible chromatin sequencing (ATAC-seq) and RNA-seq. Results showed that many accessible chromatin peaks were identified at three developmental stages (peak number, P. machaon: 44,977 [L4], 36,919 [L5], 47,147 [P]; P. bianor: 20,341 [L4], 44,668 [L5], 62,249 [P]). Moreover, the number of differentially accessible peaks and differentially expressed genes between larval stages of each butterfly species are significantly fewer than that between larval and pupal stages, suggesting a higher similarity within larvae and a significant difference between larvae and pupae. This study added the annotated information of chromatin accessibility genome-wide of the two papilionid species and will promote the investigation of gene regulation in butterfly evolution.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere21952
JournalArchives of Insect Biochemistry and Physiology
Volume111
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2022

Keywords

  • ATAC-seq
  • butterflies
  • chromatin accessibility
  • regulatory elements

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