Evolutionary origin and functional divergence of totipotent cell homeobox genes in eutherian mammals

Background: A central goal of evolutionary biology is to link genomic change to phenotypic evolution. The origin of new transcription factors is a special case of genomic evolution since it brings opportunities for novel regulatory interactions and potentially the emergence of new biological propert...

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Bibliographic Details
Authors: Maeso, Ignacio, Dunwell, Thomas L., Wyatt, Chris D. R., Marletaz, Ferdinand, Veto, Borbala, Bernal, Juan Antonio, Quah, Shan, Irimia, Manuel, Holland, Peter W. H.
Format: article
Publication Date:2016
Country:España
Institution:Instituto de Salud Carlos III (ISCIII)
Repository:Repisalud
Language:English
OAI Identifier:oai:repisalud.isciii.es:20.500.12105/5220
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12105/5220
Access Level:Open access
Keyword:Tandem duplication
Asymmetric evolution
Embryo
Placental
Homeodomain
PRD
MULTIPLE SEQUENCE ALIGNMENT
PHYLOTYPIC STAGE
XENOPUS-LAEVIS
STEM-CELLS
CRX GENES
MOUSE
FAMILY
VERTEBRATE
ANTERIOR
EMBRYOS
Description
Summary:Background: A central goal of evolutionary biology is to link genomic change to phenotypic evolution. The origin of new transcription factors is a special case of genomic evolution since it brings opportunities for novel regulatory interactions and potentially the emergence of new biological properties. Results: We demonstrate that a group of four homeobox gene families (Argfx, Leutx, Dprx, Tprx), plus a gene newly described here (Pargfx), arose by tandem gene duplication from the retinal-expressed Crx gene, followed by asymmetric sequence evolution. We show these genes arose as part of repeated gene gain and loss events on a dynamic chromosomal region in the stem lineage of placental mammals, on the forerunner of human chromosome 19. The human orthologues of these genes are expressed specifically in early embryo totipotent cells, peaking from 8-cell to morula, prior to cell fate restrictions; cow orthologues have similar expression. To examine biological roles, we used ectopic gene expression in cultured human cells followed by high-throughput RNA-seq and uncovered extensive transcriptional remodelling driven by three of the genes. Comparison to transcriptional profiles of early human embryos suggest roles in activating and repressing a set of developmentally-important genes that spike at 8-cell to morula, rather than a general role in genome activation. Conclusions: We conclude that a dynamic chromosome region spawned a set of evolutionarily new homeobox genes, the ETCHbox genes, specifically in eutherian mammals. After these genes diverged from the parental Crx gene, we argue they were recruited for roles in the preimplantation embryo including activation of genes at the 8-cell stage and repression after morula. We propose these new homeobox gene roles permitted fine-tuning of cell fate decisions necessary for specification and function of embryonic and extra-embryonic tissues utilised in mammalian development and pregnancy.