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Functional Divergence of Plant‐Derived <i>Thaumatin‐Like Protein</i> Genes in Two Closely Related Whitefly Species

Yuan Hu, Gong Cheng, Zezhong Yang, Haolin Han, Tian Tian, Xin Yang, Wen Xie, Shaoli Wang, Qingjun Wu, Xuguo Zhou, Ted C. J. Turlings, Zhaojiang Guo, Youjun Zhang

2025Advanced Science14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The recent discovery that various insects have acquired functional genes through horizontal gene transfer (HGT) has prompted numerous studies into this puzzling and fascinating phenomenon. So far, horizontally transferred genes are found to be functionally conserved and largely retained their ancestral functions. It evidently has not yet been considered that horizontally transferred genes may evolve and can contribute to divergence between species. Here, it is first showed that the genomes of the two widespread and agriculturally important whiteflies Trialeurodes vaporariorum and Bemisia tabaci both contain a plant-derived thaumatin-like protein (TLP) gene, but with highly distinct functions in these closely related pests. In T. vaporariorum, TLP has maintained a function similar to that of the plant donor, acting as an antimicrobial protein to resist fungal infection; but in sharp contrast, in B. tabaci, TLP has evolved into an effector that suppresses plant defense responses. These findings reveal an as-yet undescribed scenario of cross-species functional differentiation of horizontally transferred genes and suggest that the HGT-mediated evolutionary novelty can contribute to ecotypic divergence and even speciation.

Topics & Concepts

ThaumatinGeneBiologyWhiteflyDivergence (linguistics)Functional divergenceGeneticsBotanyComputational biologyEvolutionary biologyGene familyGene expressionPhilosophyLinguisticsPlant and animal studiesInsect-Plant Interactions and ControlHymenoptera taxonomy and phylogeny