The Scottish Oceans Institute, Gatty Marine Laboratory, School of Biology, University of St Andrews, East Sands, St Andrews, Fife, KY16 8LB, UK.
BMC Evol Biol. 2018 Dec 27;18(1):203. doi: 10.1186/s12862-018-1307-x.
Hox genes are key elements in patterning animal development. They are renowned for their, often, clustered organisation in the genome, with supposed mechanistic links between the organisation of the genes and their expression. The widespread distribution and comparable functions of Hox genes across the animals has led to them being a major study system for comparing the molecular bases for construction and divergence of animal morphologies. Echinoderms (including sea urchins, sea stars, sea cucumbers, feather stars and brittle stars) possess one of the most unusual body plans in the animal kingdom with pronounced pentameral symmetry in the adults. Consequently, much interest has focused on their development, evolution and the role of the Hox genes in these processes. In this context, the organisation of echinoderm Hox gene clusters is distinctive. Within the classificatory system of Duboule, echinoderms constitute one of the clearest examples of Disorganized (D) clusters (i.e. intact clusters but with a gene order or orientation rearranged relative to the ancestral state).
Here we describe two Hox genes (Hox11/13d and e) that have been overlooked in most previous work and have not been considered in reconstructions of echinoderm Hox complements and cluster organisation. The two genes are related to Posterior Hox genes and are present in all classes of echinoderm. Importantly, they do not reside in the Hox cluster of any species for which genomic linkage data is available.
Incorporating the two neglected Posterior Hox genes into assessments of echinoderm Hox gene complements and organisation shows that these animals in fact have Split (S) Hox clusters rather than simply Disorganized (D) clusters within the Duboule classification scheme. This then has implications for how these genes are likely regulated, with them no longer covered by any potential long-range Hox cluster-wide, or multigenic sub-cluster, regulatory mechanisms.
Hox 基因是动物发育模式形成的关键要素。它们在基因组中常常呈簇状排列,其组织与基因表达之间存在着所谓的机制联系,这一特点使其声名远扬。Hox 基因在动物中的广泛分布和相似功能,使其成为比较动物形态结构构建和分化的分子基础的主要研究系统。棘皮动物(包括海胆、海星、海参、海百合和海蛇尾)在动物王国中拥有最不寻常的体型之一,其成虫具有明显的五辐射对称。因此,人们对其发育、进化以及 Hox 基因在这些过程中的作用产生了浓厚的兴趣。在这种情况下,棘皮动物 Hox 基因簇的组织形式独具特色。在杜布勒的分类系统中,棘皮动物是最明显的未组织化(D)簇之一(即完整的簇,但基因顺序或定向相对于祖先状态发生了重排)。
本文描述了两个在大多数先前工作中被忽视且未被纳入棘皮动物 Hox 基因簇和组织形式重建的 Hox 基因(Hox11/13d 和 e)。这两个基因与后 Hox 基因有关,存在于所有棘皮动物类群中。重要的是,它们并不存在于具有基因组连锁数据的任何物种的 Hox 基因簇中。
将这两个被忽视的后 Hox 基因纳入棘皮动物 Hox 基因簇和组织形式的评估中表明,这些动物实际上具有分裂(S)Hox 基因簇,而不是杜布勒分类方案中简单的未组织化(D)基因簇。这继而对这些基因的调控方式产生了影响,因为它们不再受任何潜在的长距离 Hox 基因簇范围或多基因亚簇调控机制的影响。