Phenotypic plasticity can alter evolutionary dynamics, but its genomic consequences remain contested. Barkdull & Moreau (2025) combine comparative genomics and developmental transcriptomics in Cephalotes turtle ants to show that the repeated evolution of a soldier morph produces an asymmetric genomic signature: protein-coding genes experience genome-wide relaxed selection and reduced positive selection, whereas conserved noncoding regulatory elements show increased purifying constraint. Worker morph plasticity is driven mainly by co-option of ancient genes and by integration of insulin, imaginal-disc, and Hippo signaling.
Laino et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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