Fröbius Andreas C, Matus David Q, Seaver Elaine C
Kewalo Marine Lab, Pacific Biosciences Research Center, University of Hawaii, Honolulu, Hawaii, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2008;3(12):e4004. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0004004. Epub 2008 Dec 23.
Hox genes define regional identities along the anterior-posterior axis in many animals. In a number of species, Hox genes are clustered in the genome, and the relative order of genes corresponds with position of expression in the body. Previous Hox gene studies in lophotrochozoans have reported expression for only a subset of the Hox gene complement and/or lack detailed genomic organization information, limiting interpretations of spatial and temporal colinearity in this diverse animal clade. We studied expression and genomic organization of the single Hox gene complement in the segmented polychaete annelid Capitella sp. I. Total genome searches identified 11 Hox genes in Capitella, representing 11 distinct paralog groups thought to represent the ancestral lophotrochozoan complement. At least 8 of the 11 Capitella Hox genes are genomically linked in a single cluster, have the same transcriptional orientation, and lack interspersed non-Hox genes. Studying their expression by situ hybridization, we find that the 11 Capitella Hox genes generally exhibit spatial and temporal colinearity. With the exception of CapI-Post1, Capitella Hox genes are all expressed in broad ectodermal domains during larval development, consistent with providing positional information along the anterior-posterior axis. The anterior genes CapI-lab, CapI-pb, and CapI-Hox3 initiate expression prior to the appearance of segments, while more posterior genes appear at or soon after segments appear. Many of the Capitella Hox genes have either an anterior or posterior expression boundary coinciding with the thoracic-abdomen transition, a major body tagma boundary. Following metamorphosis, several expression patterns change, including appearance of distinct posterior boundaries and restriction to the central nervous system. Capitella Hox genes have maintained a clustered organization, are expressed in the canonical anterior-posterior order found in other metazoans, and exhibit spatial and temporal colinearity, reflecting Hox gene characteristics that likely existed in the protostome-deuterostome ancestor.
Hox基因决定了许多动物沿前后轴的区域特征。在许多物种中,Hox基因在基因组中呈簇状排列,基因的相对顺序与在体内的表达位置相对应。先前对冠轮动物的Hox基因研究仅报道了Hox基因互补体的一个子集的表达情况和/或缺乏详细的基因组组织信息,这限制了对这个多样化动物类群中空间和时间共线性的解读。我们研究了分段多毛纲环节动物 Capitella sp. I 中单个Hox基因互补体的表达和基因组组织。全基因组搜索在Capitella中鉴定出11个Hox基因,代表了11个不同的旁系同源基因群,被认为代表了冠轮动物的祖先互补体。11个Capitella Hox基因中至少有8个在基因组中连锁成一个簇,具有相同的转录方向,并且没有散布的非Hox基因。通过原位杂交研究它们的表达,我们发现11个Capitella Hox基因通常表现出空间和时间共线性。除了CapI-Post1,Capitella Hox基因在幼虫发育期间都在广泛的外胚层区域表达,这与沿前后轴提供位置信息一致。前部基因CapI-lab、CapI-pb和CapI-Hox3在体节出现之前就开始表达,而后部基因在体节出现时或之后不久出现。许多Capitella Hox基因的前部或后部表达边界与胸腹过渡区(一个主要的身体体区边界)重合。变态后,几种表达模式发生变化,包括出现明显的后部边界并限制在中枢神经系统中表达。Capitella Hox基因保持了簇状组织,以其他后生动物中发现的典型前后顺序表达,并表现出空间和时间共线性,反映了原口动物-后口动物祖先可能存在的Hox基因特征。