Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Conservation of regulatory sequences and gene expression patterns in the disintegrating Drosophila Hox gene complex
View through CrossRef
Homeotic (
Hox
) genes are usually clustered and arranged in the same order as they are expressed along the anteroposterior body axis of metazoans. The mechanistic explanation for this colinearity has been elusive, and it may well be that a single and universal cause does not exist. The
Hox
-gene complex (HOM-C) has been rearranged differently in several
Drosophila
species, producing a striking diversity of
Hox
gene organizations. We investigated the genomic and functional consequences of the two HOM-C splits present in
Drosophila buzzatii
. Firstly, we sequenced two regions of the
D. buzzatii
genome, one containing the genes
labial
and
abdominal A
, and another one including
proboscipedia
, and compared their organization with that of
D. melanogaster
and
D. pseudoobscura
in order to map precisely the two splits. Then, a plethora of conserved noncoding sequences, which are putative enhancers, were identified around the three
Hox
genes closer to the splits. The position and order of these enhancers are conserved, with minor exceptions, between the three
Drosophila
species. Finally, we analyzed the expression patterns of the same three genes in embryos and imaginal discs of four
Drosophila
species with different
Hox
-gene organizations. The results show that their expression patterns are conserved despite the HOM-C splits. We conclude that, in
Drosophila, Hox
-gene clustering is not an absolute requirement for proper function. Rather, the organization of
Hox
genes is modular, and their clustering seems the result of phylogenetic inertia more than functional necessity.
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Title: Conservation of regulatory sequences and gene expression patterns in the disintegrating
Drosophila Hox
gene complex
Description:
Homeotic (
Hox
) genes are usually clustered and arranged in the same order as they are expressed along the anteroposterior body axis of metazoans.
The mechanistic explanation for this colinearity has been elusive, and it may well be that a single and universal cause does not exist.
The
Hox
-gene complex (HOM-C) has been rearranged differently in several
Drosophila
species, producing a striking diversity of
Hox
gene organizations.
We investigated the genomic and functional consequences of the two HOM-C splits present in
Drosophila buzzatii
.
Firstly, we sequenced two regions of the
D.
buzzatii
genome, one containing the genes
labial
and
abdominal A
, and another one including
proboscipedia
, and compared their organization with that of
D.
melanogaster
and
D.
pseudoobscura
in order to map precisely the two splits.
Then, a plethora of conserved noncoding sequences, which are putative enhancers, were identified around the three
Hox
genes closer to the splits.
The position and order of these enhancers are conserved, with minor exceptions, between the three
Drosophila
species.
Finally, we analyzed the expression patterns of the same three genes in embryos and imaginal discs of four
Drosophila
species with different
Hox
-gene organizations.
The results show that their expression patterns are conserved despite the HOM-C splits.
We conclude that, in
Drosophila, Hox
-gene clustering is not an absolute requirement for proper function.
Rather, the organization of
Hox
genes is modular, and their clustering seems the result of phylogenetic inertia more than functional necessity.
Related Results
Paralogous HOX13 Genes in Human Cancers
Paralogous HOX13 Genes in Human Cancers
Hox genes (HOX in humans), an evolutionary preserved gene family, are key determinants of embryonic development and cell memory gene program. Hox genes are organized in four cluste...
Reduced H3K27me3 leads to abnormal Hox gene expression in neural tube defects
Reduced H3K27me3 leads to abnormal Hox gene expression in neural tube defects
Abstract
Background
Neural tube defects (NTDs) are severe, common birth defects that result from failure of normal neural tube closure during early ...
Abstract 4188: Association of HOX gene expression with osteopontin in ovarian cancer: Implications for biomarker development
Abstract 4188: Association of HOX gene expression with osteopontin in ovarian cancer: Implications for biomarker development
Abstract
Ovarian cancer is characterized by poor early detection and serves as an excellent model system to develop potential markers for early diagnosis. Osteoponti...
Cardiac sinus venosus differentiation is regulated by the expression of Hox genes under miR-23b, miR-130a and miR-106a modulation
Cardiac sinus venosus differentiation is regulated by the expression of Hox genes under miR-23b, miR-130a and miR-106a modulation
Abstract
Funding Acknowledgements
Type of funding sources: Public Institution(s). Main funding source(s): Junta de Extremadura, ...
<em> Hox </em>Temporal Collinearity: Misleading Fallacy or Essential Developmental Mechanism?
<em> Hox </em>Temporal Collinearity: Misleading Fallacy or Essential Developmental Mechanism?
Kondo and collaborators recently reported the absence of Hox temporal collinearity in Xenopus tropicalis. They found none in the initiation of accumulation of Hox transcr...
Dorsoventral dissociation of Hox gene expression underpins the diversification of molluscs
Dorsoventral dissociation of Hox gene expression underpins the diversification of molluscs
AbstractUnlike the Hox genes in arthropods and vertebrates, those in molluscs show diverse expression patterns and, with some exceptions, have generally been described as lacking t...
Abstract 1999: Aberrant expression of HOX transcript in ovarian carcinoma
Abstract 1999: Aberrant expression of HOX transcript in ovarian carcinoma
Abstract
Ovarian cancer is a complex disease phenotype that is challenging to diagnose, primarily because patients tend to remain non-symptomatic until after metasta...
Cis-regulatory modes of Ultrabithorax inactivation in butterfly forewings
Cis-regulatory modes of Ultrabithorax inactivation in butterfly forewings
Abstract
Hox gene clusters encode transcription factors that drive regional specialization during animal development: e.g. the Hox factor Ubx is expressed in the insect metathoraci...

