The Genome of a “Living Fossil” shows a Correlation of Spider
Diversification with Hox and Spidroin Gene Evolution
Abstract
Spiders are a hyper-diverse taxon and among the most abundant predators
in nearly all terrestrial habitats. Their success is often attributed to
key developments in their evolution such as silk and venom production
and major apomorphies such as a whole-genome duplication. Resolving deep
relationships within the spider tree of life has been historically
challenging, making it difficult to measure the relative importance of
these novelties. Whole-genome data offer an essential resource in these
efforts, but also for functional genomic studies. Here, we present de
novo assemblies for three spider species: Ryuthela nishihirai
(Heptathelidae), a representative of the ancient Mesothelae, the
suborder which is sister to all other extant spiders; Uloborus plumipes
(Uloboridae), a cribellate orbweaver whose phylogenetic placement is
especially challenging; and Cheiracanthium punctorium
(Cheiracanthiidae), which represents only the second family to be
sequenced in the hyper-diverse Dionycha clade. These genomes fill
critical gaps in the spider tree of life. Using these novel genomes
along with 25 previously published ones, we examine two proposed drivers
of diversification: spidroin gene and structural hox cluster diversity.
Our analyses show that spidroin diversification as well as hox cluster
duplication and restructuring mirror spider diversification, hence
suggesting a key role in the evolutionary success of the group. Our
assemblies provide critical genomic resources to facilitate deeper
investigations into spider evolution. The near chromosome-level genome
of the “living fossil” R. nishihirai represents an especially
important step forward, offering new insights into the origins of spider
traits.