Published January 14, 2025 | Published
Journal Article Open

Escalation of genome defense capacity enables control of an expanding meiotic driver

  • 1. ROR icon California Institute of Technology
  • 2. ROR icon University of California, Irvine
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Abstract

From RNA interference to chromatin silencing, diverse genome defense pathways silence selfish genetic elements to safeguard genome integrity. Despite their diversity, different defense pathways share a modular organization, where numerous specificity factors identify diverse targets and common effectors silence them. In the PIWI-interacting RNA (piRNA) pathway, target RNAs are first identified by complementary base pairing with piRNAs and then silenced by PIWI-clade nucleases. Such a binary architecture allows the defense systems to be readily adaptable, where new targets can be captured via innovation of specificity factors. Thus, our current understanding of genome defense against lineage-specific selfish genes has been largely limited to specificity factor innovations, while it remains poorly understood whether other types of innovations are required. Here, we describe a new type of innovation, which escalates the genome defense capacity to control a recently expanded selfish gene in Drosophila melanogaster. Through a targeted RNAi screen for repressors of Stellate—a recently evolved meiotic driver—we identified a defense factor, Trailblazer. Trailblazer is a transcription factor that promotes the expression of two PIWI-clade nucleases, Aub and AGO3, to match Stellate in abundance. Recent innovation in the DNA-binding domain of Trailblazer enabled it to elevate Aub and AGO3 expression, thereby escalating the silencing capacity of piRNA pathway to tame expanded Stellate and safeguard fertility. As copy-number expansion is a recurrent feature of diverse selfish genes across the tree of life, we envision that augmenting the defense capacity to quantitatively match selfish genes is a repeatedly employed defense strategy in evolution.

Copyright and License

Copyright © 2025 the Author(s). Published by PNAS. This article is distributed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License 4.0 (CC BY-NC-ND).

Acknowledgement

We thank Andy Clark, Bruce Hay, Ching-Ho Chang, Emiliano Marti, Ildar Gainetdinov, and Lu Yue for comments on the manuscript. We thank Ellen Rothenberg for discussion. We thank James McGehee and David Stern for advice on CRISPR/Cas9 in D. melanogaster and D. simulans, respectively. We thank Toshie Kai, Mayu Inaba, Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center, Vienna Drosophila Resource Center, and Kyoto Drosophila Stock Center for fly stocks. We are grateful to Elena Udartseva and Baira Godneeva for technical assistance. We appreciate the help of Igor Antoshechkin with sequencing, the help of Grace Shin with HCR, and the help of Giada Spigolon and Andres Collazo with microscopy. This work was supported by Faculty Scholar Award (A.A.A.) from Howard Hughes Medical Institute, R01GM097363 (A.A.A.) and R35GM142494 (Y.C.G.L.) from NIH.

 

Contributions

P.C. and A.A.A. designed research; P.C., K.C.P., E.H.P., Y.L., and Y.C.G.L. performed research; P.C. analyzed data; and P.C., Y.C.G.L., and A.A.A. wrote the paper.

Data Availability

The sequencing data generated in this study are available at NCBI SRA (PRJNA1188279) (57).

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Additional details

Created:
March 14, 2025
Modified:
March 14, 2025