homeotic genes in drosophila body patterning

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Homeotic genes in Drosophila body patterning Department of Biochemistry [email protected]

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Homeotic genes in Drosophila body patterning. Department of Biochemistry [email protected]. Developmental biology: Drosophila segmentation and repeated units. * egg: generate the system. * larva: eat and grow. * pupa: structures in larvae grow out to for m - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning

Homeotic genes in Drosophila body patterning

Department of Biochemistry

[email protected]

Page 2: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning

Developmental biology: Drosophila segmentation and repeated units

1

* egg: generate the system

* larva: eat and grow

* pupa: structures inlarvae grow out to form adult fly: metamorphosis

(Drosophila is a holometabolous insect)

Page 3: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning
Page 4: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning

Homeotic gene complexes in Drosophila

• ANT-C (Antennapedia complex) is largely responsible for segmental identity in the head and anterior thorax.

• BX-C (Bithorax complex) is responsible for segmental identity in the posterior thorax and abdomen.

Page 5: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning

HOMEOSIS

• Homeosis or homeotic transformation, is the development of one body part with the phenotype of another.

Page 6: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning

The bithorax mutations

• This class of loss of functions mutations cause the entire third thoracic segment to be transformed into a second thoracic segment giving rise to flies with four wings instead for the normal two.

Page 7: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning

The Tab dominant mutations

• These gain of function mutations transform part of the second thoracic segment into the sixth abdominal segment.

Page 8: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning

The Antennapedia mutations

• These gain of function mutations transform antenna into leg.

Page 9: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning

The Homeodomain

• The homeotic genes encode transcription factors of a class called homeodomain proteins. The homeodomain is a 60aa protein domain, which binds DNA. Hox genes bind DNA regulatory elements of their target genes in a specific combination so that the expression pattern in each of the different segments is unique.

Page 10: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning

The co-linearity principle: Homeotic gene expression in Drosophila

• The anterior boundary of homeotic gene expression is ordered from SCR (most anterior to ANTP, UBX and ABD-B (most posterior). This order is matched by the linear arrangement of the corresponding genes along chromosome 3.

Page 11: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning

Mechanisms underlying functional diversity of Hox

proteins

Understanding how function is encoded within Hox protein structure

Page 12: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning

The mystery of the homeodomain specificity

• In vitro, homeodomains have a very broad binding specificity, which does not explain the refined specific regulation of target genes observed in vivo. So how can this be explained?

Page 13: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning

The co-factor hypothesis

• There is the possibility of specific co-factors, which are expressed in the domain of expression of the Hox-gene. Until now very few were found, the most prominent example being Extradenticle and Homothorax (EXD, HTH; Ryoo et al, Development 126, pp 5137-48, 1999).

Page 14: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning

A2

A1

T2

T3

T1

Gebelein et al, Dev. Cell, 2002

Dll repression: a paradigm for the study of Hox/Exd interaction

DME-lacZ / Ubx

UbxAbdA

DllExd +

Page 15: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning

The DNA sequence motif hypothesis

• Different combination of DNA modules would give different combination of co-factors bound on the promoter and thus a different array of transcriptional interactions with each Hox protein (Li et al, Development 126, 5581-5589, 1999).

Page 16: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning

Insect vs. mammalian Hox genes

Page 17: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning

Expression patterns of mouse Hox genes

Page 18: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning

Phenotype of a homeotic mutant mouse

• Mice mutant for a targeted knockout of the HoxC8 gene reveal ribs duplication and a clenched-fingers phenotype.

Page 19: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning

Developmental strategies in animals are ancient and highly conserved. In essence, a mammal, a worm and a fly-three very different organisms-are put together with the same basic building blocks and regulatory devices.

Page 20: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning
Page 21: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning

Wild type

Hox mutant

Lewis et al. 2000

Page 22: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning
Page 23: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning

Is there a “ground” state?What could constitute a “ground”

state? Where all HOX genes are expressed in all segments

Page 24: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning

Averof and Patel 1997

Averof and Patel 1997 Nature 388, 682-686Averof 2002 Curr Op Genetics and Development 1386-392

Page 25: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning

Insects

Branchiopoda (Artemia, the brine-shrimp)

Malacostracans (Lobsters, hermit crabs)

Expression of Hox genes in arthropods

crustaceans

Page 26: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning
Page 27: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning

Changes in Hox gene expression can help explain the evolution of arthropod

body plans

Page 28: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning

species 1 species 2

Evolution of crustacean maxillipeds

Page 29: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning

Triops (no mxp): Ubx expression in all thoracic segments

Page 30: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning

T1

T2

T3

T1

T2

T3

Mysid (1 mxp): Ubx expression from T2 to the posterior

Page 31: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning

Changes in Hox genes

• Duplication of genes or whole clusters (mammals) by unequal crossing over

• Following duplication there is diversification of both coding and regulatory sequences

• Changes (rare) in coding sequences (Ubx in Diptera vs. Ubx in Lepidoptera)

• Changes in the expression of Hox targets

Page 32: Homeotic genes in  Drosophila  body patterning

Reading List

Textbooks: 1). Scott F Gilbert (2003). Developmental Biology 7th edition, chapter 9, pp285-290; 2). Wolpert Evolution and development chapter in Principles of development

General review: McGinnis W and Krumlauf R (1992). Homeobox genes and axial patterning Cell, 68, pp283-302.

Evolution of body pattern review: Averof M (2002) Curr Op Genetics and Development 1386-392