Success Story

October 31, 2018

Multicolored butterflies — the mystery solved

Three CBC affiliates, Erica Westerman, Markus Kronforst and Stephanie Palmer, UChicago, show that a single gene causes the color change.

Ever wondered why butterflies, seemingly identical in shape, come in different colors? In a recent Current Biology paper from the Kronforst group at UChicago, the researchers show that a single gene is responsible for a color of spots on wings of the butterfly species Heliconius cydno. The gene acts a suppressor of the ancestral yellow pigment, making the spots turn white. This same region of the genome appears also linked to the butterfly color mating preferences. Three CBC affiliates, Erica Westerman, Markus Kronforst and Stephanie Palmer, UChicago, are co-authors on the paper. Westerman—first author, and Kronforst—senior author are recipients of a CBC Postdoctoral Award (2014) that partially funded the published work. Palmer is a recipient of a CBC Catalyst Award (2015) and since 2017 has served on the CBC Catalyst Review Board. Congratulations to all authors involved in the study!


Single genetic switch changes butterfly wing color, study finds

Scientists use gene editing to identify gene that controls wing color mimicry in butterflies

UChicago Medicine, At the Forefront  |  by Matt Wood  |  October 25, 2018


Heliconius cydno butterflies (Photo: Kat Carlton)

Heliconius butterflies are a diverse and colorful group of species that live throughout tropical regions of Central and South America. Many of them have wing patterns and colors that mimic other species to protect themselves from predators, and new research by scientists from the University of Chicago shows that in one species, Heliconius cydno, just one gene controls whether the butterfly has white or yellow spots on its wings.

To conduct the study, which was published Oct. 25 in Current Biology, the researchers developed a genetic map using white and yellow H. cydno butterflies. They then studied genome sequences to identify a single gene called aristaless1 (al1) that acted as a switch for yellow and white coloration.

Most Heliconius species closely related to H. cydno have yellow spots on their wings; H. cydno has subspecies that are either yellow or white. The researchers saw that the butterflies with white spots have elevated expression of al1 (i.e. it’s switched “on”), meaning that it may play a role in repressing yellow pigmentation from being produced. Using CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing tools, the scientists confirmed this function of al1. When they knocked it out (or switched it off) in embryos of butterflies that should be white, those butterflies developed yellow spots instead.


Marcus Kronforst on butterfly wing color genetics:
A single genetic switch changes butterfly wing color


Marcus Kronforst, UChicago

“For decades people have been cross-breeding these butterflies and they knew that this white vs. yellow switch was in one spot in the genome. They just weren’t able to trace it to the actions of a single gene,” said Marcus Kronforst, PhD, associate professor of ecology and evolution and senior author of the study.

“Now with CRISPR we can knock the gene out and see what happens. It turns out the evolutionary innovation here is not one species gaining a pigment, but instead turning on a gene to repress an ancestrally present pigment,” he said.

Kronforst and his team also traced the evolutionary history this color patterning by comparing genetic differences in the H. cydno version of al1 to those of other, closely-related Heliconius species. The white version of the gene appears to be a relatively new development. While H. cydno was the first species to develop white forms, there are signs of cross-breeding that introduced the white color into other species at a later time.

There is also evidence that the same gene may be linked to mating preferences for color. White H. cydno males prefer females with white spots; yellow males likewise prefer yellow females. Scientists have long known that genes for both color patterning and mate preference in H. cydno are located in the same area of the genome.

“Now that we know the molecular basis of the color, we can start asking how preference is linked to it,” Kronforst said. “Are they two genes near one another or is it somehow the same gene doing both jobs?”

While Kronforst and his team don’t yet know if mate preference is controlled by al1 or another gene nearby, the close proximity could account for the diversity of Heliconius species.

“Whether it was natural selection driving it or it was just chance that these two things are linked, that might be part of the reason why we have such a diverse group of butterflies,” he said. “When the color and preference for the color are linked together, it causes these things to evolve together very rapidly.”


The study, “Aristaless controls butterfly wing color variation used in mimicry and mate choice,” was supported by the Chicago Biomedical Consortium, Big Ideas Generator funding from the University of Chicago, the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, Harvard’s FAS Center for Systems Biology, the Pew Biomedical Scholars program, the University of Chicago Neubauer funds, and the National Science Foundation. Additional authors include Erica Westerman from UChicago and the University of Arkansas; Nicholas VanKuren, Darli Massardo, Ayse Tenger-Trolander, Erick Bayala, Kenneth Barr, Nathan Buerkle and Stephanie Palmer from UChicago; Wei Zhang from UChicago and Peking University, China; Ryan Hill from the University of the Pacific; Nicola Chamberlain from Harvard University; and Tracy Douglas from Rice University.


Source:

Adapted (with modifications) from the UChicago Medicine, At the Forefront by Matt Wood, published on October 25, 2018.


Publication attributed to the CBC funding*:

Westerman EL, VanKuren NW, Massardo D, Tenger-Trolander A, Zhang W, Hill RI, Perry M, Bayala E, Barr K, Chamberlain N, Douglas TE, Buerkle N, Palmer SE, Kronforst MR. Aristaless Controls Butterfly Wing Color Variation Used in Mimicry and Mate Choice. Current Biology. Published: October 25, 2018. (www.cell.com)


Featured scientist(s) with ties to cbc:

Erica Westerman and Marcus Kronforst, UChicago

Stephanie Palmer, UChicago

Related:

August 8, 2018
▸ Lisagor Award 2018
CBC affiliate and evolutionary biologist, Marcus Kronforst, UChicago, recognized with a Lisagor Award for his educational work on Chicago PBS series, ‘Urban Nature’

January 25, 2018
▸ Learning from a predator… about learning
Two CBC awardees, Stephanie Palmer and Jason MacLean, UChicago, dissect the process of visual prediction in a hungry salamander

November 10, 2017
▸ A counterintuitive “cost” of mimicry
A study co-authored by three UChicago evolutionary biologists with links to CBC