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Dive into the research topics where Heath Blackmon is active.

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Featured researches published by Heath Blackmon.


Scientific Data | 2014

Tree of Sex: A database of sexual systems

Tia-Lynn Ashman; Doris Bachtrog; Heath Blackmon; Emma E. Goldberg; Matthew W. Hahn; Mark Kirkpatrick; Jun Kitano; Judith E. Mank; Itay Mayrose; Ray Ming; Sarah P. Otto; Catherine L. Peichel; Matthew W. Pennell; Nicolas Perrin; Laura Ross; Nicole Valenzuela; Jana C. Vamosi

The vast majority of eukaryotic organisms reproduce sexually, yet the nature of the sexual system and the mechanism of sex determination often vary remarkably, even among closely related species. Some species of animals and plants change sex across their lifespan, some contain hermaphrodites as well as males and females, some determine sex with highly differentiated chromosomes, while others determine sex according to their environment. Testing evolutionary hypotheses regarding the causes and consequences of this diversity requires interspecific data placed in a phylogenetic context. Such comparative studies have been hampered by the lack of accessible data listing sexual systems and sex determination mechanisms across the eukaryotic tree of life. Here, we describe a database developed to facilitate access to sexual system and sex chromosome information, with data on sexual systems from 11,038 plant, 705 fish, 173 amphibian, 593 non-avian reptilian, 195 avian, 479 mammalian, and 11,556 invertebrate species.


Genome Biology | 2016

Genome of the Asian longhorned beetle (Anoplophora glabripennis), a globally significant invasive species, reveals key functional and evolutionary innovations at the beetle-plant interface

Duane D. McKenna; Erin D. Scully; Yannick Pauchet; Kelli Hoover; Roy Kirsch; Scott M. Geib; Robert F. Mitchell; Robert M. Waterhouse; Seung Joon Ahn; Deanna Arsala; Joshua B. Benoit; Heath Blackmon; Tiffany Bledsoe; Julia H. Bowsher; André Busch; Bernarda Calla; Hsu Chao; Anna K. Childers; Christopher Childers; Dave J. Clarke; Lorna Cohen; Jeffery P. Demuth; Huyen Dinh; HarshaVardhan Doddapaneni; Amanda Dolan; Jian J. Duan; Shannon Dugan; Markus Friedrich; Karl M. Glastad; Michael A. D. Goodisman

BackgroundRelatively little is known about the genomic basis and evolution of wood-feeding in beetles. We undertook genome sequencing and annotation, gene expression assays, studies of plant cell wall degrading enzymes, and other functional and comparative studies of the Asian longhorned beetle, Anoplophora glabripennis, a globally significant invasive species capable of inflicting severe feeding damage on many important tree species. Complementary studies of genes encoding enzymes involved in digestion of woody plant tissues or detoxification of plant allelochemicals were undertaken with the genomes of 14 additional insects, including the newly sequenced emerald ash borer and bull-headed dung beetle.ResultsThe Asian longhorned beetle genome encodes a uniquely diverse arsenal of enzymes that can degrade the main polysaccharide networks in plant cell walls, detoxify plant allelochemicals, and otherwise facilitate feeding on woody plants. It has the metabolic plasticity needed to feed on diverse plant species, contributing to its highly invasive nature. Large expansions of chemosensory genes involved in the reception of pheromones and plant kairomones are consistent with the complexity of chemical cues it uses to find host plants and mates.ConclusionsAmplification and functional divergence of genes associated with specialized feeding on plants, including genes originally obtained via horizontal gene transfer from fungi and bacteria, contributed to the addition, expansion, and enhancement of the metabolic repertoire of the Asian longhorned beetle, certain other phytophagous beetles, and to a lesser degree, other phytophagous insects. Our results thus begin to establish a genomic basis for the evolutionary success of beetles on plants.


Molecular Ecology | 2014

Diversification and asymmetrical gene flow across time and space: lineage sorting and hybridization in polytypic barking frogs

Jeffrey W. Streicher; Thomas J. Devitt; Caren S. Goldberg; John H. Malone; Heath Blackmon; Matthew K. Fujita

Young species complexes that are widespread across ecologically disparate regions offer important insights into the process of speciation because of their relevance to how local adaptation and gene flow influence diversification. We used mitochondrial DNA and up to 28 152 genomewide single nucleotide polymorphisms from polytypic barking frogs (Craugastor augusti complex) to infer phylogenetic relationships and test for the signature of introgressive hybridization among diverging lineages. Our phylogenetic reconstructions suggest (i) a rapid Pliocene–Pleistocene radiation that produced at least nine distinct lineages and (ii) that geographic features of the arid Central Mexican Plateau contributed to two independent northward expansions. Despite clear lineage differentiation (many private alleles and high between‐lineage FST scores), D‐statistic tests, which differentiate introgression from ancestral polymorphism, allowed us to identify two putative instances of reticulate gene flow. Partitioned D‐statistics provided evidence that these events occurred in the same direction between clades but at different points in time. After correcting for geographic distance, we found that lineages involved in hybrid gene flow interactions had higher levels of genetic variation than independently evolving lineages. These findings suggest that the nature of hybrid compatibility can be conserved overlong periods of evolutionary time and that hybridization between diverging lineages may contribute to standing levels of genetic variation.


Journal of Heredity | 2017

Sex Determination, Sex Chromosomes, and Karyotype Evolution in Insects

Heath Blackmon; Laura Ross; Doris Bachtrog

Insects harbor a tremendous diversity of sex determining mechanisms both within and between groups. For example, in some orders such as Hymenoptera, all members are haplodiploid, whereas Diptera contain species with homomorphic as well as male and female heterogametic sex chromosome systems or paternal genome elimination. We have established a large database on karyotypes and sex chromosomes in insects, containing information on over 13000 species covering 29 orders of insects. This database constitutes a unique starting point to report phylogenetic patterns on the distribution of sex determination mechanisms, sex chromosomes, and karyotypes among insects and allows us to test general theories on the evolutionary dynamics of karyotypes, sex chromosomes, and sex determination systems in a comparative framework. Phylogenetic analysis reveals that male heterogamety is the ancestral mode of sex determination in insects, and transitions to female heterogamety are extremely rare. Many insect orders harbor species with complex sex chromosomes, and gains and losses of the sex-limited chromosome are frequent in some groups. Haplodiploidy originated several times within insects, and parthenogenesis is rare but evolves frequently. Providing a single source to electronically access data previously distributed among more than 500 articles and books will not only accelerate analyses of the assembled data, but also provide a unique resource to guide research on which taxa are likely to be informative to address specific questions, for example, for genome sequencing projects or large-scale comparative studies.


Genetics | 2014

Estimating Tempo and Mode of Y Chromosome Turnover: Explaining Y Chromosome Loss With the Fragile Y Hypothesis

Heath Blackmon; Jeffery P. Demuth

Chromosomal sex determination is phylogenetically widespread, having arisen independently in many lineages. Decades of theoretical work provide predictions about sex chromosome differentiation that are well supported by observations in both XY and ZW systems. However, the phylogenetic scope of previous work gives us a limited understanding of the pace of sex chromosome gain and loss and why Y or W chromosomes are more often lost in some lineages than others, creating XO or ZO systems. To gain phylogenetic breadth we therefore assembled a database of 4724 beetle species’ karyotypes and found substantial variation in sex chromosome systems. We used the data to estimate rates of Y chromosome gain and loss across a phylogeny of 1126 taxa estimated from seven genes. Contrary to our initial expectations, we find that highly degenerated Y chromosomes of many members of the suborder Polyphaga are rarely lost, and that cases of Y chromosome loss are strongly associated with chiasmatic segregation during male meiosis. We propose the “fragile Y” hypothesis, that recurrent selection to reduce recombination between the X and Y chromosome leads to the evolution of a small pseudoautosomal region (PAR), which, in taxa that require XY chiasmata for proper segregation during meiosis, increases the probability of aneuploid gamete production, with Y chromosome loss. This hypothesis predicts that taxa that evolve achiasmatic segregation during male meiosis will rarely lose the Y chromosome. We discuss data from mammals, which are consistent with our prediction.


Coleopterists Bulletin | 2015

Coleoptera karyotype database

Heath Blackmon; Jeffery P. Demuth

Cytogenetic research has a long history in Coleoptera taxonomy and evolutionary biology. The last synthesis of beetle karyotypes was completed in 1978 when only 2,160 beetles had been studied (Smith and Virkki 1978). Since this compilation, the number of beetles that have been targeted by cytogenetic studies has doubled. However, karyotype records are scattered among hundreds of journal articles often with narrow taxonomic or geographic focus. This has made it difficult to analyze large-scale patterns of karyotype evolution across Coleoptera or even determine what data is available for a clade. To eliminate this barrier, we created the Coleoptera karyotype database (www.uta.edu/karyodb/). The database currently contains 4,797 records, but we envision it as a long-term repository that will be regularly updated. This will allow open access to data that were previously scattered and often available only through subscriptionbased publications. We store the karyotype data in an SQL database that can be queried using a dynamically updated webpage. Users generate database queries by making selections at up to three taxonomic levels (suborder, family, or genus) and or selections of up to three karyotype characters (sex chromosome system, b-chromosomes, and reproductive mode). Once a user has defined a query, it is used to produce an html table. The website also allows users to export a comma-separated text file of their results for offline analysis. The long history of beetle cytogenetics has led to naming conventions that describe not only the number of autosomes and the sex chromosome system but also the behavior of the sex chromosomes during meiosis (Table 1). Testes squashes are the most common method employed in beetle karyotyping, and the karyotypes reported are meioformulas. For example, a commonly reported karyotype is “9+Xyp” which indicates nine autosomes, an XY sex determination system, and that a small Y chromosome remains at a distance from the X during meiosis. Most organisms require homologous chromosomes to come together and form chiasmata to faithfully segregate the chromosomes into the gametes. However, many beetles, particularly in the suborder Polyphaga, exhibit various forms of distance-pairing sex chromosome segregation of the sex chromosomes. In addition to variation in sex chromosomes, Coleoptera karyotypes also reveal abundant variation in chromosome number, with diploid number ranging 4–70. Our compilation reveals that variation in chromosome numbers among clades is highly heterogeneous. Some families, such as


Journal of Evolutionary Biology | 2015

Recombination, chromosome number and eusociality in the Hymenoptera

Laura Ross; Heath Blackmon; Pedro Lorite; Vladimir E. Gokhman; Nate B. Hardy

Extraordinarily high rates of recombination have been observed in some eusocial species. The most popular explanation is that increased recombination increases genetic variation among workers, which in turn increases colony performance, for example by increasing parasite resistance. However, support for the generality of higher recombination rates among eusocial organisms remains weak, due to low sample size and a lack of phylogenetic independence of observations. Recombination rate, although difficult to measure directly, is correlated with chromosome number. As predicted, several authors have noted that chromosome numbers are higher among the eusocial species of Hymenoptera (ants, bees and wasps). Here, we present a formal comparative analysis of karyotype data from 1567 species of Hymenoptera. Contrary to earlier studies, we find no evidence for an absolute difference between chromosome number in eusocial and solitary species of Hymenoptera. However, we find support for an increased rate of chromosome number change in eusocial taxa. We show that among eusocial taxa colony size is able to explain some of the variation in chromosome number: intermediate‐sized colonies have more chromosomes than those that are either very small or very large. However, we were unable to detect effects of a number of other colony characteristics predicted to affect recombination rate – including colony relatedness and caste number. Taken together, our results support the view that a eusocial lifestyle has led to variable selection pressure for increased recombination rates, but that identifying the factors contributing to this variable selection will require further theoretical and empirical effort.


Genome | 2016

Microsatellite landscape evolutionary dynamics across 450 million years of vertebrate genome evolution

Richard H. Adams; Heath Blackmon; Jacobo Reyes-Velasco; Drew R. Schield; Daren C. Card; Audra L. Andrew; Nyimah Waynewood; Todd A. Castoe

The evolutionary dynamics of simple sequence repeats (SSRs or microsatellites) across the vertebrate tree of life remain largely undocumented and poorly understood. In this study, we analyzed patterns of genomic microsatellite abundance and evolution across 71 vertebrate genomes. The highest abundances of microsatellites exist in the genomes of ray-finned fishes, squamate reptiles, and mammals, while crocodilian, turtle, and avian genomes exhibit reduced microsatellite landscapes. We used comparative methods to infer evolutionary rates of change in microsatellite abundance across vertebrates and to highlight particular lineages that have experienced unusually high or low rates of change in genomic microsatellite abundance. Overall, most variation in microsatellite content, abundance, and evolutionary rate is observed among major lineages of reptiles, yet we found that several deeply divergent clades (i.e., squamate reptiles and mammals) contained relatively similar genomic microsatellite compositions. Archosauromorph reptiles (turtles, crocodilians, and birds) exhibit reduced genomic microsatellite content and the slowest rates of microsatellite evolution, in contrast to squamate reptile genomes that have among the highest rates of microsatellite evolution. Substantial branch-specific shifts in SSR content in primates, monotremes, rodents, snakes, and fish are also evident. Collectively, our results support multiple major shifts in microsatellite genomic landscapes among vertebrates.


BioEssays | 2015

The fragile Y hypothesis: Y chromosome aneuploidy as a selective pressure in sex chromosome and meiotic mechanism evolution

Heath Blackmon; Jeffery P. Demuth

Loss of the Y‐chromosome is a common feature of species with chromosomal sex determination. However, our understanding of why some lineages frequently lose Y‐chromosomes while others do not is limited. The fragile Y hypothesis proposes that in species with chiasmatic meiosis the rate of Y‐chromosome aneuploidy and the size of the recombining region have a negative correlation. The fragile Y hypothesis provides a number of novel insights not possible under traditional models. Specifically, increased rates of Y aneuploidy may impose positive selection for (i) gene movement off the Y; (ii) translocations and fusions which expand the recombining region; and (iii) alternative meiotic segregation mechanisms (achiasmatic or asynaptic). These insights as well as existing evidence for the frequency of Y‐chromosome aneuploidy raise doubt about the prospects for long‐term retention of the human Y‐chromosome despite recent evidence for stable gene content in older non‐recombining regions.


Evolution | 2015

The evolutionary dynamics of haplodiploidy: genome architecture and haploid viability

Heath Blackmon; Nate B. Hardy; Laura Ross

Haplodiploid reproduction, in which males are haploid and females are diploid, is widespread among animals, yet we understand little about the forces responsible for its evolution. The current theory is that haplodiploidy has evolved through genetic conflicts, as it provides a transmission advantage to mothers. Male viability is thought to be a major limiting factor; diploid individuals tend to harbor many recessive lethal mutations. This theory predicts that the evolution of haplodiploidy is more likely in male heterogametic lineages with few chromosomes, as genes on the X chromosome are often expressed in a haploid environment, and the fewer the chromosome number, the greater the proportion of the total genome that is X‐linked. We test this prediction with comparative phylogenetic analyses of mites, among which haplodiploidy has evolved repeatedly. We recover a negative correlation between chromosome number and haplodiploidy, find evidence that low chromosome number evolved prior to haplodiploidy, and that it is unlikely that diplodiploidy has reevolved from haplodiploid lineages of mites. These results are consistent with the predicted importance of haploid male viability.

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Jeffery P. Demuth

University of Texas at Arlington

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Laura Ross

University of Edinburgh

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Amanda Dolan

University of Rochester

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Anna K. Childers

United States Department of Agriculture

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Christopher Childers

United States Department of Agriculture

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Daren C. Card

University of Texas at Arlington

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Deanna Arsala

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Doris Bachtrog

University of California

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Drew R. Schield

University of Texas at Arlington

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