Evolution of the insect Hox gene cluster: comparative analysis across 243 species

The Hox gene cluster is an iconic example of evolutionary conservation between divergent animal lineages, providing evidence for ancient similarities in the genetic control of embryonic development. However, there are differences between taxa in gene order, gene number and genomic organisation imply...

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Main Authors: Mulhair, PO, Holland, PWH
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2022
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author Mulhair, PO
Holland, PWH
author_facet Mulhair, PO
Holland, PWH
author_sort Mulhair, PO
collection OXFORD
description The Hox gene cluster is an iconic example of evolutionary conservation between divergent animal lineages, providing evidence for ancient similarities in the genetic control of embryonic development. However, there are differences between taxa in gene order, gene number and genomic organisation implying conservation is not absolute. There are also examples of radical functional change of Hox genes; for example, the ftz, zen and bcd genes in insects play roles in segmentation, extraembryonic membrane formation and body polarity, rather than specification of anteroposterior position. There have been detailed descriptions of Hox genes and Hox gene clusters in several insect species, including important model systems, but a large-scale overview has been lacking. Here we extend these studies using the publiclyavailable complete genome sequences of 243 insect species from 13 orders. We show that the insect Hox cluster is characterised by large intergenic distances, consistently extreme in Odonata, Orthoptera, Hemiptera and Trichoptera, and always larger between the ‘posterior’ Hox genes. We find duplications of ftz and zen in many species and multiple independent cluster breaks, although certain modules of neighbouring genes are rarely broken apart suggesting some organisational constraints. As more high-quality genomes are obtained, a challenge will be to relate structural genomic changes to phenotypic change across insect phylogeny.
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spelling oxford-uuid:ca116e46-9eff-42f8-bb07-9631793f5e7e2023-09-13T09:29:38ZEvolution of the insect Hox gene cluster: comparative analysis across 243 speciesJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:ca116e46-9eff-42f8-bb07-9631793f5e7eEnglishSymplectic ElementsElsevier2022Mulhair, POHolland, PWHThe Hox gene cluster is an iconic example of evolutionary conservation between divergent animal lineages, providing evidence for ancient similarities in the genetic control of embryonic development. However, there are differences between taxa in gene order, gene number and genomic organisation implying conservation is not absolute. There are also examples of radical functional change of Hox genes; for example, the ftz, zen and bcd genes in insects play roles in segmentation, extraembryonic membrane formation and body polarity, rather than specification of anteroposterior position. There have been detailed descriptions of Hox genes and Hox gene clusters in several insect species, including important model systems, but a large-scale overview has been lacking. Here we extend these studies using the publiclyavailable complete genome sequences of 243 insect species from 13 orders. We show that the insect Hox cluster is characterised by large intergenic distances, consistently extreme in Odonata, Orthoptera, Hemiptera and Trichoptera, and always larger between the ‘posterior’ Hox genes. We find duplications of ftz and zen in many species and multiple independent cluster breaks, although certain modules of neighbouring genes are rarely broken apart suggesting some organisational constraints. As more high-quality genomes are obtained, a challenge will be to relate structural genomic changes to phenotypic change across insect phylogeny.
spellingShingle Mulhair, PO
Holland, PWH
Evolution of the insect Hox gene cluster: comparative analysis across 243 species
title Evolution of the insect Hox gene cluster: comparative analysis across 243 species
title_full Evolution of the insect Hox gene cluster: comparative analysis across 243 species
title_fullStr Evolution of the insect Hox gene cluster: comparative analysis across 243 species
title_full_unstemmed Evolution of the insect Hox gene cluster: comparative analysis across 243 species
title_short Evolution of the insect Hox gene cluster: comparative analysis across 243 species
title_sort evolution of the insect hox gene cluster comparative analysis across 243 species
work_keys_str_mv AT mulhairpo evolutionoftheinsecthoxgeneclustercomparativeanalysisacross243species
AT hollandpwh evolutionoftheinsecthoxgeneclustercomparativeanalysisacross243species