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Conserved Anterior Boundaries of Hox Gene Expression in the Central Nervous System of the LeechHelobdella
Authors:Matthew J Kourakis  Viraj A Master  Denise K Lokhorst  Denise Nardelli-Haefliger  Cathy J Wedeen  Mark Q Martindale  Marty Shankland
Institution:aDepartment of Organismal Biology and Anatomy, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, 60637;bDepartment of Pharmacological and Physiological Sciences, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, 60637;cDepartment of Neurobiology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, 02115;dDepartment of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California, Berkeley, California, 94720;eCommittees on Developmental Biology, Neurobiology, and Evolutionary Biology, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, 60637
Abstract:Molecular developmental studies of fly and mouse embryos have shown that the identity of individual body segments is controlled by a suite of homeobox-containing genes called the Hox cluster. To examine the conservation of this patterning mechanism in other segmented phyla, we here describe four Hox gene homologs isolated from glossiphoniid leeches of the genusHelobdella.Based on sequence similarity and phylogenetic analysis, the leech genesLox7, Lox6, Lox20,andLox5are deemed to be orthologs of theDrosophilageneslab, Dfd, Scr,andAntp,respectively. Sequence similarities betweenLox5andAntpoutside the homeodomain and phylogenetic reconstructions suggest that the Antennapedia family of Hox genes (as defined by Bürglin, 1994) had already expanded to include at least two discreteAntpandUbx/abdAprecursors prior to the annelid/arthropod divergence.In situhybridization reveals that the fourLoxgenes described in this study are all expressed at high levels within the segmented portion of the central nervous system (CNS), with variable levels of expression in the segmental mesoderm. Little or no expression was seen in peripheral ectoderm or endoderm, or in the unsegmented head region (prostomium). EachLoxgene has a distinct anterior expression boundary within one of the four rostral segments, and the anterior-posterior (AP) order of these expression boundaries is identical to that reported for the orthologous Hox gene products in fly and mouse. This finding supports the idea that the process of AP axis differentiation is conserved among the higher metazoan phyla with respect to the regional expression of individual Hox genes along that axis. One unusual feature of leech Hox genes is the observation that some genes are only expressed during later development -- beginning at the time of terminal cell differentiation -- whereas others begin expression at a much earlier stage, and their RNA ceases to be detectable shortly after the onset of expression of the ‘late’ Hox genes. The functional significance of this temporal disparity is unknown, but it is noteworthy that only the two ‘early’ Hox genes display high levels of mesodermal expression.
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