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Copyright Zhou et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Plasticity of the Chemoreceptor Repertoire in Drosophila melanogaster 1Department of Biology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina, United States of America 2W. M. Keck Center for Behavioral Biology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina, United States of America 3Department of Statistics, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina, United States of America 4Department of Genetics, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina, United States of America Jonathan Flint, Editor The Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics, University of Oxford, United Kingdom * E-mail: anholt/at/ncsu.edu Conceived and designed the experiments: SZ TFCM RRHA. Performed the experiments: SZ. Analyzed the data: SZ EAS RRHA. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: EAS TFCM. Wrote the paper: SZ TFCM RRHA. Received June 26, 2009; Accepted September 10, 2009. Abstract For most organisms, chemosensation is critical for survival and is mediated by large families of chemoreceptor proteins, whose expression must be tuned appropriately to changes in the chemical environment. We asked whether expression of chemoreceptor genes that are clustered in the genome would be regulated independently; whether expression of certain chemoreceptor genes would be especially sensitive to environmental changes; whether groups of chemoreceptor genes undergo coordinated rexpression; and how plastic the expression of chemoreceptor genes is with regard to sex, development, reproductive state, and social context. To answer these questions we used Drosophila melanogaster, because its chemosensory systems are well characterized and both the genotype and environment can be controlled precisely. Using customized cDNA microarrays, we showed that chemoreceptor genes that are clustered in the genome undergo independent transcriptional regulation at different developmental stages and between sexes. Expression of distinct subgroups of chemoreceptor genes is sensitive to reproductive state and social interactions. Furthermore, exposure of flies only to odor of the opposite sex results in altered transcript abundance of chemoreceptor genes. These genes are distinct from those that show transcriptional plasticity when flies are allowed physical contact with same or opposite sex members. We analyzed covariance in transcript abundance of chemosensory genes across all environmental conditions and found that they segregated into 20 relatively small, biologically relevant modules of highly correlated transcripts. This finely pixilated modular organization of the chemosensory subgenome enables fine tuning of the expression of the chemoreceptor repertoire in response to ecologically relevant environmental and physiological conditions. Author Summary Rapid adaptation and phenotypic plasticity to the chemical environment are essential prerequisites for survival; and, consequently, large families of genes that mediate the recognition of olfactory and gustatory cues have evolved. We asked how flexible the expression of these genes is in the face of rapidly changing conditions encountered during an individual's lifetime. We used the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, to address this question, since both the genetic composition and environmental rearing conditions can be controlled precisely in this experimentally amenable model organism. By measuring expression levels of all chemosensory genes simultaneously, we identified genes that show altered expression at different developmental stages, during aging, in males and females, following mating, and in different social conditions. We asked whether chemosensory genes are regulated independently or whether their regulation is structured. We found that chemosensory genes that are located in close proximity to one another on the chromosome are often regulated independently. However, statistical analysis showed that groups of chemosensory genes are coordinately expressed in response to a range of environmental conditions, revealing an underlying modular organization of the phenotypic plasticity of the chemosensory receptor repertoire. Introduction Responses to the chemical environment play an important role in animal survival, as chemical cues direct foraging behavior and food selection, predator avoidance, and, in insects, host plant recognition for oviposition and larval feeding. Chemical signals are also essential for the selection of mating partners, maternal behavior, and kin recognition. As a consequence of the profound importance of chemosensation for survival and reproduction, several large families of chemosensory genes have evolved through repeated processes of gene duplication and diversification [1]–[4], including genes that encode odorant receptors (Ors) [4]–[8], gustatory receptors (Grs) [4],[9], and, in insects, odorant binding proteins (Obps) [10]–[12]. In addition, large multigene families aimed at eliminating toxic chemicals have evolved, most prominently the cytochrome P450 superfamily [13]. Detoxification of plant defense chemicals together with development of chemosensors that enable fine tuning to host plants has been instrumental in the establishment of specialized insect-host plant relationships [14]. For example, the black swallowtail butterfly, Papilio polyxenes, has developed cytochrome P450s that can metabolize toxic furanocoumarins, which allows it to feed and oviposit on plants of the Umbelliferae family [15]. Similarly, Drosophila sechellia's host plant, Morinda citrifolia, is toxic to other Drosophila species. A 4 bp insertion in the upstream regulatory region of the D. sechellia Obp57e gene eliminates expression of this odorant binding protein, which elicits avoidance of the Morinda fruit in Drosophila species in which the gene is intact [16]. The rapid evolution of these large chemoreceptor gene families has generated functional redundancy between receptors and their ligands [17],[18], which confers sensitivity and robustness to the chemical recognition process. Animals, however, interact differently with their chemosensory environments under different developmental, physiological and social conditions. Therefore, it stands to reason that expression of the chemosensory repertoire would be dynamically regulated. This raises several fundamental questions: (1) Is the expression of chemoreceptor genes that are organized as clusters in the genome independently regulated or do genes within a cluster act as co-regulated functional ensembles? (2) Are all chemoreceptor genes equally sensitive to environmental fluctuations or is a core group of chemoreceptor genes particularly responsive to environmental or physiological changes? (3) Are certain chemoreceptor genes frequently co-regulated when environmental or physiological conditions change? (4) Is the expression of particular chemoreceptor genes upregulated or downregulated as a function of sex (males versus females), development (e.g. in larval stages, adult stages and aged flies), reproductive state (e.g. virgin or mated) or social context (e.g. solitary or group reared)? To answer these questions we focused on the chemoreceptor families of Drosophila melanogaster, where both the olfactory and gustatory systems have been well characterized [4], [6]–[12],[19]. D. melanogaster provides an advantageous genetic model as inbred individuals can be readily generated and grown under controlled conditions, enabling control over both the genotype and the environment [20]. We constructed expression microarrays that enable us to survey simultaneously expression of all Obp, Or and Gr genes. We analyzed chemoreceptor expression as a function of sex, development, reproductive state, and social environment, and obtained a systematic description of the plasticity of the chemosensory window through which the fly experiences its chemical environment. We found that genes in clusters are independently regulated in the two sexes, during different developmental stages, and under different physiological and social conditions. Whereas many chemosensory genes showed plasticity in expression, a smaller number of exceptionally plastic genes was evident. Analysis of covariance of transcript levels across all environmental conditions showed that the chemosensory subgenome is structured as a mosaic of 20 small modules of highly correlated transcripts. This finely pixilated modular organization of the chemosensory transcriptome allows finely tuned phenotypic plasticity of expression of the chemoreceptor repertoire under different environmental conditions. Results Construction and Characterization of the cDNA Microarrays To assess to what extent transcription of chemosensory genes responds to changing conditions, we constructed cDNA expression arrays that represent 50 Odorant binding protein (Obp), 59 Odorant receptor (Or), and 59 Gustatory receptor (Gr) genes, four genes that encode other antenna-specific proteins, and four control genes. To prepare cDNA probes, primer sets were designed to generate unique 400–600 bp amplicons. All amplification products were sequenced and the sequences analyzed using the BLAST algorithm to ensure absence of cross-hybridizing sequences. Cross-hybridization is likely to occur in only two cases. Amplicons for Gr64d and Gr64e do not overlap, but these genes have partially overlapping transcripts and, therefore, could cross-hybridize. In addition, Or19a and Or19d are located 50 kb apart in opposite orientation and share the same sequences, rendering them indistinguishable. The extent of dye effects was assessed by hybridization of a mixture of equal amounts of Cy3 and Cy5 labeled RNA of the same sample. There was generally a close correlation between Cy3 and Cy5 hybridization intensities (Figure S1), indicating overall minor dye effects. Among the 168 chemosensory genes represented on the microarray, we detected expression of 50 Obp genes, 54 Or genes, and 52 Gr genes, in at least one experimental condition. Expression levels of Obp genes were generally at least one order of magnitude higher than those of Or and Gr genes. Expression of chemoreceptor genes on our customized EST microarrays correlated well with previously obtained transcriptional profiles of chemosensory genes represented on high density oligonucleotide microarrays from Affymetrix, Inc. [21] ((Figure S2; r = 0.818, n = 174), but resolution for detection of chemoreceptor gene expression was substantially improved. We were not able to detect expression of Gr22b, Gr58c, Gr59c, Gr77a, Gr93b, Gr93c, Gr93d, Or10a, Or24a, Or85b, Or85c and Or85d, possibly due to highly localized expression of rare transcripts.Modulation of Chemoreceptor Gene Expression during Development To assess modulation of chemoreceptor gene expression during development we compared expression of Obp, Or and Gr genes in third instar larvae (mixed sexes) and in virgin adult males and females. We also assessed changes in chemoreceptor gene expression in aged males and females. Pairwise comparisons between larvae and adults showed that relative expression of 28 chemoreceptor genes was biased in or specific to larvae at a Bonferroni corrected significance threshold of P<5.68E-5 (corrected for multiple testing at a nominal significance level of P<0.01) with a 2-fold change filter; conversely, 35 chemoreceptor genes showed adult-biased or adult-specific relative expression (Figure 1
Since many chemoreceptors occur in clusters in the genome [4], we asked whether individual members of a cluster show coordinated or independent rexpression during development. We examined chemoreceptor gene clusters without intervening genes, including the Gr22a–e cluster, the Obp19a–d, Obp50a–e, Obp56a–f, and Obp57a–c clusters, and the Or43a–b cluster (Figure 3
When we compared relative expression of the same chemoreceptor genes in males and females, we observed extensive sexual dimorphism in transcript abundance levels. Male-biased expression was evident for Obp50c, Obp56d, and Obp56f, whereas female-biased expression was observed for Obp19a, Obp19c, Obp56a, Obp56e, Obp57a, and Or43b (Figure 3 Next, we asked whether chemosensory gene expression levels are stable throughout adult live or are subject to age-dependent plasticity. We compared transcript abundance levels in 10-day old and 6-week-old virgin males and females maintained under carefully controlled standard laboratory conditions, and found extensive age-dependent changes in transcript abundance in all classes of chemosensory genes (Figure 4
Modulation of Chemoreceptor Gene Expression by Reproductive State Next, we asked to what extent changes in physiological condition affect expression of the chemoreceptor repertoire. Mating results in physiological changes in females [22] and males [23]–[25]. We compared transcript abundance levels of chemosensory genes in virgin males and females reared separately to those of individuals that were allowed to mate (Figure 5
Modulation of Chemoreceptor Gene Expression by Social Context Our observation that the expression of the chemosensory repertoire is modified dramatically by social contact during reproduction led us to ask whether social context per se can elicit altered expression of distinct chemosensory genes. We compared transcript abundance levels in male and female flies that were reared as single isolated individuals to those of virgin flies reared in corresponding single sex groups. We observed changes in expression levels of few Gr or Or genes under these conditions (Figure 6
Chemoreceptors have been implicated in the detection of both volatile [27] and non-volatile [28] social chemical signals. We wanted to assess whether exposure to social odor cues alone could result in altered transcript abundance of chemosensory genes. Therefore, we separated single flies from groups of same-sex or opposite sex flies with a double cheesecloth partition that would allow the transmission of olfactory cues, but would prevent physical interaction (it should be noted that Canton S w− flies used in these experiments are visually impaired). When single flies were maintained for five days under conditions in which they were exposed to same-sex group odors, there were virtually no changes in transcript patterns of chemosensory genes. Only expression of Obp57c was increased in females exposed to female group odor (Figure 7A
Correlated Phenotypic Plasticity of Chemoreceptor Gene Transcripts We noticed that environmental plasticity of expression was heterogeneous among chemosensory genes, with certain members of the chemoreceptor ensemble responding more frequently to environmental changes than others. Therefore, we decided to investigate whether groups of chemosensory genes showed correlated transcript levels across all experimental conditions. We analyzed transcript levels using the modulated modularity clustering method. This unbiased, self-organizing paradigm is based on correlations of transcript abundance levels between different conditions, and sorts transcripts into modules such that transcript abundance levels among members within each module are more closely correlated than with members outside that module [29],[30]. The resulting pairwise correlation matrix can be represented graphically such that modules of correlated transcripts are organized in a matrix, with color-coding indicating the strength of each pairwise correlation [29],[30] (Figure 8
Analysis of enrichment for shared transcription factor binding motifs is restricted due to the small size of the modules. Nevertheless, we analyzed in each module 5′ untranslated regions for enrichment of 62 putative transcription factor binding motifs. We found enrichment in module 15 of a transcription factor binding site for mirr shared by Obp83g and Obp99b (P = 0.03), in module 19 enrichment of a transcription factor binding site for pros shared by a5 and Or22b (P = 0.01), and in module 20 enrichment of a transcription factor binding site for Abd-B shared by Or49b, Gr64d, and Gr93a (P = 0.00035). However, even though some promoter regions that control cell-specific expression of odorant receptors have been identified [40],[41], transcription factors that control expression of Or, Gr and Obp genes remain largely unknown and may not be represented among the group of common transcription factors which we analyzed.Discussion The olfactory and gustatory systems in Drosophila melanogaster have been well characterized [4], [6]–[12],[19], but the central problem of how ecologically relevant environmental conditions affect transcriptional variation in expression of the chemoreceptor repertoire has not been addressed previously in a systematic manner. As chemoreceptors are distributed over the entire body of the fly, including the third antennal segment, maxillary palps, proboscis, cibarial taste organs, tarsi, wing margins and the female abdominal reproductive plate, we chose to use a comprehensive analysis whole flies rather than heads. Consequently, some differences in expression between the sexes may be due to expression of chemoreceptors in non-chemosensory tissues. It is of interest to note that expression of odorant receptors in non-chemosensory organs has been observed using similar customized cDNA microarrays in both mice [42] and humans [43]. One should note that, in the absence of corresponding quantitative information about the chemosensory proteome, the relationship between transcript abundance levels and chemosensory function must be interpreted with caution. Although to date there is no evidence for posttranslational modifications of Obps, Ors and Grs might be subject to posttranslational regulatory mechanisms that may affect the amount of active gene product. Similarly, stability of mRNA has been postulated as a contributing factor to phenotypic variation in olfactory response to benzaldehyde associated with polymorphisms in the Obp99 gene cluster in a population of wild-derived inbred lines of Drosophila melanogaster [44]. Here, we have shown that transcriptional profiles of chemosensory genes in D. melanogaster are highly plastic during early development and ageing, as a result of mating, and in social contexts. Expression of chemoreceptor genes is highly sexually dimorphic and frequently sexually antagonistic, and the extent of transcriptional responses to changing conditions is heterogeneous among the chemoreceptor repertoire. Examination of the FlyAtlas expression data base indicates that Obp50c, Obp56d Obp99a and Gr32a are expressed in testes, Obp8a, Obp22a, Obp51a, Obp56e, Obp56f, Obp56g, Obp56i and Or59b in the accessory gland, Obp19c in the ovaries and Pino in both ovaries, testes and accessory glands, which suggests pleiotropic functions of these chemoreceptors and may account in part for the observed sexually dimorphic expression patterns [45]. In this study we have not included an analysis of expression of the recently discovered family of ionotropic odorant receptor (IR) genes, which are expressed in coeloconic sensilla of the antenna and respond, among others, to water and amines [46], and which were not represented on our microarrays. It will be of interest to investigate in future studies whether these genes show similar plasticity in expression as observed for the classical chemosensory genes. A previous study used in situ hybridization to detect GFP expression of odorant receptors in larvae under the control of odorant receptor-specific promoters [47] through the GAL4-UAS binary expression system [48]. This study showed expression of 25 odorant receptors in the Drosophila larval olfactory system and reported that 14 of these receptors were larval-specific [47]. Although most of the larval expressed Or transcripts reported in this study were also identified on our arrays, the majority of these Or transcripts was also detectable in adults. There was some agreement with specificity of odorant receptor expression in larvae and adults (e.g. Or33a was found to show larval-biased expression and 10 Or genes were found to be expressed in adults as well as larvae both by us and others). However, the concordance between larval specificity detected by GAL4-UAS mediated expression of GFP in olfactory tissues and direct measurements of transcript abundance on our arrays from whole flies was generally poor. This can be due to expression of chemoreceptors in adult tissues not examined by previous in situ hybridization or reporter gene expression, differences in detection thresholds between the techniques used, differences in the strengths of GAL4-linked odorant receptor promoters in larvae and adults, or possibly differences in genetic backgrounds between strains used in the two studies. A previous study reported sexually dimorphic expression of Obp99a and Obp99b [49]. Here we showed that sexual dimorphism in expression of chemosensory genes is widespread. This is especially evident among Obp genes, but the apparent prevalence of sexual dimorphism among these genes may be caused by their higher expression levels compared to those of Or and Gr genes. These broad sex-dependent differences in levels of expression of chemosensory genes suggest that males and females experience, interact with, and adapt to their chemical environments differently; for example, females have to evaluate the suitability of oviposition sites. The independent regulation of genes within clusters, which we observed, is perhaps not surprising, as it may be a necessary requirement for subfunctionalization or neofunctionalization during evolution when daughter genes of duplication events either allow refinement and/or expansion in perception of the chemical environment or the acquisition of specialized chemosensory functions. Such functional diversification is reflected in the extensive sexual dimorphism where duplication of an ancestral gene may have resulted in daughter genes with different functions in males and females [49]. Similarly, gene duplication may enable adaptations of daughter genes to specialized chemosensory needs at different developmental stages (Figure 3 Transcript profiles change drastically after mating, not only in females but also in males. The altered transcript abundance of Obp19d, Obp28a, Obp56a, Obp56g, and Obp99c that we observe in mated females (Figure 5 Both volatile chemicals and cuticular hydrocarbons signal social information in Drosophila. The gustatory receptor Gr68a, which is expressed in chemosensory cells in the male tarsi, has been implicated in tactile chemosensation during courtship [38], together with Gr32a [39]. Recognition of the courtship pheromone, 11-cis-vaccenyl acetate, is mediated via the odorant binding protein Lush (Obp76a) and the Or67d receptor [31]–[33]. The expression of transcripts for Obp76a and Or67d is highly correlated across the range of environments studied here, as is expression of transcripts for Gr32a and Gr68a. A large ensemble of chemoreceptor genes, however, is sensitive to the social environment and modulated based on social context and, especially, opposite sex group odor (Figure 7 POU-domain transcription factors, such as acj-6, have been implicated in mediating expression of odorant receptors in Drosophila olfactory neurons [40],[53]. A phylogenetic analysis of conserved regulatory elements among sequenced genomes of 12 Drosophila species has identified regulatory elements that act combinatorially to promote or repress the expression of specific odorant receptors in the olfactory sensilla of the maxillary palp [41]. A similar array of regulatory elements acted on by various transcription factors may also regulate Or gene expression in the antenna. Similar elements that regulate expression of Obp genes or Gr genes have not yet been identified. It is not clear whether transcriptional regulators and their binding sites that fine-tune transcription of Or genes in response to environmental changes are the same as those that control Or gene expression during development. Our results show that such fine tuning is exquisite in that genes that are located in close proximity within clusters can undergo independent transcriptional regulation (e.g. Figure 3 Elegant electrophysiological studies have provided a detailed characterization of the molecular response profiles of a large number of odorant receptors in D. melanogaster [18],[54]. We found that four odorant receptors with documented odorant response profiles that all respond to alcohols and aliphatic esters [54] are contained in module 14 (Or35a, Or47a, Or85b and Or98a). Together with the observation that two of the four genes in Module 4 (Or67d and Obp76a [Lush]) encode proteins that are known to respond to cis-vaccenyl acetate, it is reasonable to extrapolate that the observed covariance in expression may have functional significance. However, the nature of naturally occurring ecologically relevant chemical signals that are discriminated by these receptors and the functional relationships between odorant binding proteins and odorant receptors and/or gustatory receptors remain largely unknown. Our focused analysis of the chemoreceptor gene families using cDNA microarrays that provide enhanced resolution over previously used Affymetrix GeneChips revealed that the ensemble of chemosensory genes fractionates into 20 relatively small environmentally correlated modules (Figure 8 Methods Drosophila Rearing Isogenic Drosophila melanogaster Canton S (B) w− flies were used for all experiments and grown under standard culture conditions (cornmeal-molasses-agar-medium, 25°C, 60–75% relative humidity, 12-hr light-dark cycle) for 4–5 days, unless otherwise specified. Larvae were collected at the 3rd instar stage. Sexes were reared separately after eclosion, except where indicated otherwise. Modulation of Gene Expression during Development Chemoreceptor gene expression was compared between larval and adult samples, prepared by pooling an equal number of females and males. In addition, we compared young flies (10-day old) and old flies (6 week-old), transferred to fresh food every two days. Sexual Dimorphism and Modulation of Gene Expression after Mating Chemoreceptor gene expression was compared between virgin females and virgin males, between virgin and mated females, and between virgin and mated males. To ensure that males had mated, we placed single males in vials with two females and collected males for microarray analysis when they were 5 days old, if females had oviposited. Modulation of Gene Expression by Social Context Chemoreceptor gene expression was compared between flies reared in isolation and reared in a group of 25 same sex flies. To assess to what extent modulation of gene expression was dependent on social odor cues, we exposed single males or females to the odor from groups of flies of the same sex or opposite sex. Single flies were separated from groups of flies behind a screen of two layers of cheese cloth that prevented physical interactions (visual contact does not occur as our Canton S (B) strain carries a white mutation that renders them blind). cDNA Microarrays We amplified 400–600 bp fragments from genomic DNA or cDNA corresponding to exon sequences of 50 Obp genes, 59 Or genes, 59 Gr genes, four genes encoding antennal specific proteins (a5, a10, smi21F, Os9), plus two housekeeping genes as positive controls (Gapdh1 and actin-5C), and Gal4 and LacZ as negative controls (Table S4). The identities of all amplicons were verified by sequencing and arrays were printed on a Genetix QArray2 microarray printer at the Genomic Sciences Laboratory at North Carolina State University. Experiments comparing gene expression between larvae and adult flies used arrays with four technical replicates per slide; all other experiments used arrays containing eight technical replicates per slide. For hybridization to the arrays, fly samples were collected and frozen between 1:00 and 3:00 pm. RNA samples were extracted from 25 flies per biological replicate, subjected to one round of amplification using the MessageAmp aRNA kit from Ambion Biosystems, Inc. (Foster City, CA) and 5 µg of each RNA sample was labeled with Cy3 or Cy5 fluorescent dyes (Amersham, Pharmacia, Piscataway, NJ; cat. # PA23001 and 25001). Labeled samples were purified using the QIAquick PCR Purification Kit (Qiagen, Inc., Valencia, CA). Six biological replicates of each sample were used for each experiment and included dye swaps to control for possible dye effects. Hybridization was performed for 60 h in a water bath at 42°C in the dark. Arrays were scanned in a GenePix 4000B scanner, and raw data gathered by GenePix Pro software. Microarray Data Analysis The raw data were subjected to log2 transformation and first normalized using a mixed analysis of variance (ANOVA) model accounting for dye, array, technical replicates (nested within array), and dye×array effects, where array, rep (array) and dye×array are random effects. Residuals were then extracted from the model and used for further ANOVA analyses to assess significant differences in gene expression among the samples. We used factorial, mixed model ANOVA according to the model: Residual = μ+dye+array+rep (array)+stage/sex/condition+ε, where μ represents the overall mean value and ε the error variance, to further partition variation of transcriptional expression between dye (fixed), array (random), technical replicates nested within array (rep (array) random) and stage (or sex, or treatment) terms by gene for each experiment. We also extracted residuals from raw data across all experiments after mixed model normalization to account for technical variation for cluster analysis. We used Modulated Modularity Clustering (MMC) [29] to organize the 172 genes into modules of correlated transcripts. MMC returned 20 modules as illustrated in Figure 8Figure S1 Correlation between Cy3 and Cy5 hybridization intensities. To assess dye effects we performed hybridization with a mixture of equal aliquots from the same RNA sample, extracted from an equal number of male and female flies, labeled separately with Cy3 and Cy5. There were four replicates of each cDNA probe on the array. Note the close correlation between Cy3 and Cy5 hybridization intensities with only minor dye effects, skewed towards Cy3 at low signal intensities and towards Cy5 at high fluorescent intensities. (1.88 MB EPS) Click here for additional data file.(1.7M, eps) Figure S2 Correlation between chemoreceptor gene hybridization signal intensities on Affymetrix and cDNA microarrays. The figure shows the correlation between fluorescence intensities of an Affymetrix microarray and our customized cDNA microarray for independent RNA samples extracted from young mated adult male flies. The Affymetrix microarray data are obtained from [21]. The scatter diagram includes 174 comparisons, excluding the lacZ and GAL4 genes, which were included on the cDNA microarrays as background controls. (1.20 MB EPS) Click here for additional data file.(1.1M, eps) Table S1 Genes that are differentially expressed in larvae and adult flies. (0.09 MB PDF) Click here for additional data file.(88K, pdf) Table S2 Genes that show sexual dimorphic expression. (0.09 MB PDF) Click here for additional data file.(90K, pdf) Acknowledgments We thank Julien Ayroles and Dr. Christina Grozinger for valuable advice and helpful discussions. Footnotes The authors have declared that no competing interests exist. This work was supported by National Institutes of Health grant GM059469. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. References 1. Aloni R, Olender T, Lancet D. Ancient genomic architecture for mammalian olfactory receptor clusters. Genome Biol. 2006;7:R88. [PubMed] 2. Kambere MB, Lane RP. Co-regulation of a large and rapidly evolving repertoire of odorant receptor genes. BMC Neurosci. 2007;8(Suppl 3):S2. [PubMed] 3. Niimura Y, Nei M. Evolutionary dynamics of olfactory and other chemosensory receptor genes in vertebrates. J Hum Genet. 2006;51:505–517. [PubMed] 4. Robertson HM, Warr CG, Carlson JR. 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[Genome Biol. 2006]