Vavouri Tanya, Walter Klaudia, Gilks Walter R, Lehner Ben, Elgar Greg
Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, Wellcome Trust Genome Campus, Hinxton, Cambridge CB10 1SA, UK.
Genome Biol. 2007;8(2):R15. doi: 10.1186/gb-2007-8-2-r15.
The human genome contains thousands of non-coding sequences that are often more conserved between vertebrate species than protein-coding exons. These highly conserved non-coding elements (CNEs) are associated with genes that coordinate development, and have been proposed to act as transcriptional enhancers. Despite their extreme sequence conservation in vertebrates, sequences homologous to CNEs have not been identified in invertebrates.
Here we report that nematode genomes contain an alternative set of CNEs that share sequence characteristics, but not identity, with their vertebrate counterparts. CNEs thus represent a very unusual class of sequences that are extremely conserved within specific animal lineages yet are highly divergent between lineages. Nematode CNEs are also associated with developmental regulatory genes, and include well-characterized enhancers and transcription factor binding sites, supporting the proposed function of CNEs as cis-regulatory elements. Most remarkably, 40 of 156 human CNE-associated genes with invertebrate orthologs are also associated with CNEs in both worms and flies.
A core set of genes that regulate development is associated with CNEs across three animal groups (worms, flies and vertebrates). We propose that these CNEs reflect the parallel evolution of alternative enhancers for a common set of developmental regulatory genes in different animal groups. This 're-wiring' of gene regulatory networks containing key developmental coordinators was probably a driving force during the evolution of animal body plans. CNEs may, therefore, represent the genomic traces of these 'hard-wired' core gene regulatory networks that specify the development of each alternative animal body plan.
人类基因组包含数千个非编码序列,这些序列在脊椎动物物种之间往往比蛋白质编码外显子更保守。这些高度保守的非编码元件(CNE)与协调发育的基因相关,并被认为可作为转录增强子。尽管它们在脊椎动物中具有极高的序列保守性,但在无脊椎动物中尚未鉴定出与CNE同源的序列。
我们在此报告,线虫基因组包含一组与脊椎动物对应物具有序列特征而非序列一致性的另类CNE。因此,CNE代表了一类非常特殊的序列,它们在特定动物谱系内极其保守,但在不同谱系之间却高度分化。线虫CNE也与发育调控基因相关,包括特征明确的增强子和转录因子结合位点,这支持了CNE作为顺式调控元件的推测功能。最值得注意的是,156个与人类CNE相关且有无脊椎动物直系同源基因的基因中,有40个在蠕虫和果蝇中也与CNE相关。
一组调控发育的核心基因在三个动物类群(蠕虫、果蝇和脊椎动物)中都与CNE相关。我们提出,这些CNE反映了不同动物类群中一组共同的发育调控基因的替代增强子的平行进化。包含关键发育协调因子的基因调控网络的这种“重新布线”可能是动物体型进化过程中的一个驱动力。因此,CNE可能代表了这些“硬连线”核心基因调控网络的基因组痕迹,这些网络决定了每种替代动物体型的发育。