Deep phylogenomics of a tandem-repeat galectin regulating appendicular skeletal pattern formation.

Abstract:

BACKGROUND:A multiscale network of two galectins Galectin-1 (Gal-1) and Galectin-8 (Gal-8) patterns the avian limb skeleton. Among vertebrates with paired appendages, chondrichthyan fins typically have one or more cartilage plates and many repeating parallel endoskeletal elements, actinopterygian fins have more varied patterns of nodules, bars and plates, while tetrapod limbs exhibit tandem arrays of few, proximodistally increasing numbers of elements. We applied a comparative genomic and protein evolution approach to understand the origin of the galectin patterning network. Having previously observed a phylogenetic constraint on Gal-1 structure across vertebrates, we asked whether evolutionary changes of Gal-8 could have critically contributed to the origin of the tetrapod pattern. RESULTS:Translocations, duplications, and losses of Gal-8 genes in Actinopterygii established them in different genomic locations from those that the Sarcopterygii (including the tetrapods) share with chondrichthyans. The sarcopterygian Gal-8 genes acquired a potentially regulatory non-coding motif and underwent purifying selection. The actinopterygian Gal-8 genes, in contrast, did not acquire the non-coding motif and underwent positive selection. CONCLUSION:These observations interpreted through the lens of a reaction-diffusion-adhesion model based on avian experimental findings can account for the distinct endoskeletal patterns of cartilaginous, ray-finned, and lobe-finned fishes, and the stereotypical limb skeletons of tetrapods.

journal_name

BMC Evol Biol

journal_title

BMC evolutionary biology

authors

Bhat R,Chakraborty M,Glimm T,Stewart TA,Newman SA

doi

10.1186/s12862-016-0729-6

subject

Has Abstract

pub_date

2016-08-18 00:00:00

pages

162

issue

1

issn

1471-2148

pii

10.1186/s12862-016-0729-6

journal_volume

16

pub_type

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