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Copyright © Ivyspring International Publisher. This is an open access article. Reproduction is permitted for personal and noncommerical use, provided that the article is in whole, unmodified, and properly cited. Evolutionary genomics of the recently duplicated amphioxus Hairy genes 1 Departament de Genètica, Facultat de Biologia, Universitat de Barcelona, Avda. Diagonal 645, 08028 Barcelona, Spain 2 Instituto de Investigaciones Biomédicas CSIC-UAM, Arturo Duperier 4, 28029 Madrid, Spain Corresponding address: Miguel Manzanares. Tel. 34-915854493; Fax: 34-915854401; E-mail: mmanzanares/at/iib.uam.es # Both authors contributed equally to the work Conflict of interest: The authors have declared that no conflict of interest exist Received January 18, 2006; Accepted February 24, 2006. Abstract Amphioxus Hairy genes have gone through a number of lineage-specific duplications, resulting in eight members, some of which are differentially expressed in the embryo. In order to gain insights into the evolution and function of this gene family we have compared their genomic structure and searched for conserved non-coding sequence elements. We have found that introns have been lost independently from these genes at least twice and after the duplication events. By carrying out phylogenetic footprinting between paralogues expressed in the embryo, we have found a differential distribution of conserved elements that could explain the limited overlap in expression patterns of Hairy genes in the amphioxus embryo. Furthermore, clustering of RBP-Jk binding sites in these conserved elements suggests that amphioxus Hairy genes are downstream targets of the Notch signaling pathway, as occurs in vertebrates. All of this evidence suggests that amphioxus Hairy genes have gone through a process of subfunctionalization shortly after their duplication, representing an extreme and rapid case of the duplication-degeneration-complementation model. Keywords: amphioxus, DDC model, Hairy, phylogenetic footprinting, evolution 1. INTRODUCTION Amphioxus is believed to be the closest living invertebrate relative to vertebrates 1. However, this privileged position does not imply the freezing of its genome. It evolved directly from the last common ancestor of cephalochordates and vertebrates, but it is not the ancestor, extinct for several hundreds of million years. Hence, its genome has been independently evolving since then, as has been that of vertebrates. In the vertebrate lineage the evolution from the last ancestor most probably involved two rounds of genome duplication 2. This increase in the number of genes may have been instrumental, by means of neo-functionalization (adoption of new roles) of gene duplicates, for the acquisition of vertebrate novel features, such as migratory neural crest and derivates, skeletal system, cartilaginous tissue, and a complex brain 3. Studying the prototypical amphioxus genome may help understand the ancestral function of a vertebrate gene family, with typically several members in vertebrates and a single representative in amphioxus 4. Hence, the latest may be closer to the single gene present in the chordate ancestor. Such analyses in vertebrates are usually hampered by redundancy and neofunctionalization. However, as noticed earlier, the amphioxus genome has been also evolving since the separation from its last common ancestor with vertebrates. One therefore expects to find cephalochordate-specific duplicates for some gene families. Actually, this has been reported 5, and the extreme case is to be found in the Hairy family of helix-loop-helix transcription factors, with eight members in amphioxus (HairyA to H) and only one in mouse (Hes1) and two in chicken, Xenopus and zebrafish 6. The eight amphioxus Hairy genes conserve their gene structure without excessive accumulation of mutations, expansions or losses, and none of the copies include stop codons in the coding sequence. This indicates that they have not degenerated to pseudogenes, and should be expressed at some point during amphioxus life cycle. For four of them (HairyA to HairyD) their expression during development is known 6. HairyA to D expression are mostly not overlapping, or overlapping in a subtle manner during particular developmental stages. From the expression data, it has been proposed that amphioxus Hairy genes, after gene duplication from a single ancestor, underwent a process of divergence in the cis-regulatory regions that matches the duplication-degeneration-complementation process (the DDC model). The DDC model tries to explain why a high percentage of gene duplicates (much more than expected by statistics) are maintained (and expressed) in present genomes, by means of subfunctionalization 7. Under this model, duplicated copies of a single gene suffer differential loss of cis-regulatory regions. Therefore, a complex or pleiotropic function that before duplication was performed by a single gene is subdivided in discrete components. These copies become all necessary and essential, as they keep individual and unique cis-regulatory regions. Although amphioxus HairyA to HairyD have specific expression and minor overlapping, the overall regions or tissues where they are expressed are the same. They are expressed in the neural tube, presomitic mesoderm, somites, endoderm or notochord. For this reason, one expects to find conserved elements in the regulatory sequences of these four genes. These elements could represent enhancers with spatial information for these big regions and then, each gene's expression should be refined via enhancers that we could not recognise because they contain specific spatial information (unique to a particular Amphi-Hairy gene). One of the developmental processes where Hairy genes play a major role is the molecular clock responsible for the formation of somites. Various factors involved in this process are under the control of the Notch signalling pathway in zebrafish 8, 9, chicken 10 and mice 11-13. The RBP-Jk binding sites are the primary transcriptional mediators of the Notch signaling. The intracellular domain of Notch (NICD), resulting after the cleavage of Notch upon ligand binding, is able to transactivate the transcription of target genes through binding to RBP- Jk binding sites 14. One of these targets in mouse is Hes1, a Hairy gene which contains RBP- Jk sites in its 5' regulatory region.In order to gain insights into the process of amplification of the Hairy family in amphioxus, to identify cis-regulatory modules responsible for the maintenance of the duplicates and to unravel whether amphioxus Hairy genes may be under the control of the Notch pathway, we have cloned the full coding region of HairyA to F, plus 3 kb of 5' regulatory regions and performed in silico analysis of potential cis-regulatory control elements. 2. MATERIALS AND METHODS Isolation and sequencing of genomic clones Genomic clones containing amphioxus genes were isolated by high stringency screening at 65ºC in Church's buffer 15 of a lambda phage genomic library 16. Positive clones were isolated, subcloned in plasmids, and relevant regions sequenced. The probes used to screen the library were derived from previously described cDNA clones 6 and designed to contain the 3' coding region but neither the conserved bHLH domain nor the orange domain from each Hairy gene. We used 6 different probes for amphioxus HairyA to HairyF. Genomic clones for HairyG and HairyH were previously described 6. The last exon/intron boundary of HairyH was determined by searching the Trace Archives of B. floridae (clone gnl/ti/538762490) Sequence analysis and comparative genomics Genomic sequences from amphioxus HairyA, B, C and D were analyzed using both local and multiple alignment algorithms through the Vista (genome.lbl.gov/vista 17), Pipmaker (bio.cse.psu.edu/pipmaker 18) and Mulan (mulan.dcode.org 19) servers. Conserved elements identified this way were further analyzed and corrected alignments generated using Clustal X 20. Potential binding site for transcription factors, particularly for RBP-Jk, were analyzed using Matinspector (http://www.genomatrix.de 21). Intron-exon organization of Ciona intestinalis Hairy genes was predicted from genomic sequence obtained from the Ensembl server (www.ensembl.org). 3. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION Genomic organization and intron loss in amphioxus Hairy genes In order to understand the genomic structure and analyze the existence of putative regulatory elements in amphioxus Hairy genes, we screened a genomic library 16 under high stringency conditions using probes specific for six genes from this family from which no genomic clones were previously available 6. We were able to obtain genomic fragments ranging from 15 to 20 kb containing the full coding region of AmphiHairy A to G. At least 8 kb of genomic sequence was obtained for AmphiHairyA, B, C and D, covering 3 kb of 5' upstream sequence, the full coding region including (accession numbers DQ402480 to DQ402483) Comparison of the genomic sequence to the predicted peptides from all eight amphioxus Hairy genes allowed us to determine their exon/intron structure and compare it to what is known for members of the family in other chordates. We found that the coding regions of HairyA and HairyE are interrupted by three introns, the two first (introns I and II, Fig. Fig.1)1
The fact that two amphioxus and Ciona Hairy genes share the exon-intron organization with vertebrates makes this the most likely gene structure in the common ancestor of chordates, as well as of the ancestral gene that gave rise to all amphioxus Hairy genes via tandem gene duplication 6. The most parsimonious explanation for the observed distribution of intron loss in the remaining genes is that loss of intron III occurred only once, and that this copy was further duplicated in tandem. It is possible that loss of intron III occurred before the divergence of cephalochordates and urochordates, but this is not supported by phylogenetic analysis, as Ciona hairyc does not group with any of the amphioxus HairyC, D, F, G nor H genes, but with the other two Ciona Hairy genes (not shown). Finally, the loss of intron I in HairyB would surely have occurred at a later stage, once all duplicated copies had been fixed in the genome. Detailed comparative studies have shown that the loss of introns during evolution is much more frequent 24, 25, than generally expected 26. Two main possible mechanisms have been envisioned that could explain the precise excision of intron sequences, such as we find in amphioxus Hairy genes. On one hand, an RNA mediated mechanisms, by which a spliced mRNA recombines with the endogenous locus, has been described 27, 28. An alternative mechanism argues that precise excision is mediated by non-homologous recombination between short repeats located at the 5' and 3' end of introns 29, 30. In any case, our observation of at least two independent events of intron loss in a duplicated gene family in the amphioxus lineage shows that introns are being lost at a high rate even during recent duplication events. Evolutionary conservation of genomic sequences upstream of amphioxus Hairy genes Previous analysis of the expression pattern of amphioxus Hairy genes showed that the four genes that are expressed during embryogenesis (HairyA, B, C and D) had undergone a process of subfunctionalization, whereby the sum of all their expression domains in the embryo resembles that of Hairy genes from vertebrates 6. It has been argued that these processes occur via differential loss of cis-regulatory elements between duplicated genes 7, 31. In order to examine if this held true for the amphioxus Hairy family, we analyzed the genomic region surrounding these four genes to search for conserved non-coding sequences. This approach, named phylogenetic footprinting 32, has been mainly used to compare ortholog genes and genomic regions between different species 33 as an approach for the identification of cis-regulatory elements 34, 35. However, it has been rarely used to compare paralogous genes from the same species as we carry out in this study. Genomic sequence ranging from 3 kb upstream to 3 kb downstream was obtained for amphioxus HairyA, B, C and D. Other Hairy genes were excluded from the analysis, as they are not expressed in the embryo and therefore not relevant for our analysis. Multiple local and global alignments between these sequences were performed using different comparative genomic tools (see Materials and methods). Using a detection threshold of a minimum of 50 base pairs (bp) and 65% similarity, we did not detect any conserved blocks in introns nor in 3' flanking genomic sequences. However, under these conditions we were able to identify four conserved blocks in the 5' flanking genomic regions that were differentially distributed among the genes under study (boxes 1 to 4; Fig. Fig.2,2
Box1 (red in Fig. Fig.2)2 We next searched in these elements for known transcription factors binding sites (see Materials and Methods), with the aim of identifying possible upstream regulators of amphioxus Hairy genes. While being aware of the very high rate of false positives inherent to this type of analysis owing to the promiscuous binding of transcription factors 38, we were particularly interested in consensus sites that were evolutionarily conserved between different Hairy genes. Interestingly, we identified a number of putative binding sites for RBP-Jk in all four conserved boxes, which is known to be the major transcriptional effector of Notch, and it has been shown that Hairy genes from different organisms are downstream targets of this signaling pathway 9, 12. To examine whether the distribution of RBP-Jk binding sites was random or specific for the conserved elements, we repeated our search for these sites but over the full 3 kb of upstream genomic sequence for all four genes (grey lines in Fig. Fig.2;2 Rapid evolution of amphioxus Hairy genes: an extreme case of DDC? Hairy genes are highly pleiotropic and have been implicated in numerous functions, such as somitogenesis, neurogenesis, endocrine and T lymphocyte development 40. Based on the embryonic expression patterns, we can hypothesize that amphioxus Hairy genes will carry out similar roles, as they are predominantly expressed in the neural tube, notochord, endocrine system, and mesoderm 6. While these functions are performed by one (mouse) or two (chick, Xenopus, zebrafish) genes in vertebrates, in amphioxus there are eight Hairy genes product of a specific duplication in this lineage, of which at least four are expressed in specific domains in the early embryo 6. These domains are only partially overlapping and not all four genes are expressed in all domains. Therefore, it is tempting to speculate that following duplication there has been a process of subfunctionalization 7 by which regulatory elements responsible for specific expression domains have been differentially retained in the duplicated genes. Our analysis of conserved non-coding elements fits well with this scenario, as we have been able to identify a number of these that are differentially distributed among HairyA to D genes. Matching expression domains with conserved elements allows us to suggest that these boxes are cis-regulatory elements driving gene expression in specific domains (see Fig. Fig.44
This and previous studies 6 highlight the rapid divergence that has occurred after the lineage-specific duplication of amphioxus Hairy genes. We can observe differential gene expression during development, intron loss and distribution of putative cis-regulatory elements in a single gene family. These observations highlight the risk of considering the amphioxus genome as archetypal and representative of the last common ancestor of chordates. The amphioxus genome has continued changing since the divergence from the common ancestor with vertebrates, and specific gene expansions have occurred at multiple times. A thorough understanding of the genome organization and regulation in amphioxus will certainly help understand vertebrate biology, but taking into account that we will be comparing two of the endpoints of the evolutionary bush, and not the branching point and the tip of the branch from a tree. 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Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1994 Mar 1; 91(5):1801-4.
[Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1994]Dev Suppl. 1994; ():125-33.
[Dev Suppl. 1994]Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2000 Apr 25; 97(9):4449-52.
[Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2000]J Struct Funct Genomics. 2003; 3(1-4):75-84.
[J Struct Funct Genomics. 2003]Gene. 2002 Apr 3; 287(1-2):121-8.
[Gene. 2002]Development. 2003 Dec; 130(24):5903-14.
[Development. 2003]Development. 2003 Dec; 130(24):5903-14.
[Development. 2003]Genetics. 1999 Apr; 151(4):1531-45.
[Genetics. 1999]Nature. 2000 Nov 23; 408(6811):475-9.
[Nature. 2000]Development. 2002 Jun; 129(12):2929-46.
[Development. 2002]Nature. 2003 Jan 16; 421(6920):275-8.
[Nature. 2003]Dev Cell. 2002 Jul; 3(1):63-74.
[Dev Cell. 2002]Dev Cell. 2002 Jul; 3(1):75-84.
[Dev Cell. 2002]J Neurosci Methods. 1995 Jul; 59(2):205-8.
[J Neurosci Methods. 1995]Evol Dev. 2000 Sep-Oct; 2(5):284-93.
[Evol Dev. 2000]Development. 2003 Dec; 130(24):5903-14.
[Development. 2003]Bioinformatics. 2004 Mar 22; 20(5):636-43.
[Bioinformatics. 2004]Genome Res. 2000 Apr; 10(4):577-86.
[Genome Res. 2000]Genome Res. 2005 Jan; 15(1):184-94.
[Genome Res. 2005]Nucleic Acids Res. 1997 Dec 15; 25(24):4876-82.
[Nucleic Acids Res. 1997]Bioinformatics. 2005 Jul 1; 21(13):2933-42.
[Bioinformatics. 2005]Evol Dev. 2000 Sep-Oct; 2(5):284-93.
[Evol Dev. 2000]Development. 2003 Dec; 130(24):5903-14.
[Development. 2003]Development. 2003 Dec; 130(24):5903-14.
[Development. 2003]J Biol Chem. 1994 Feb 18; 269(7):5150-6.
[J Biol Chem. 1994]Dev Genes Evol. 2003 Jun; 213(5-6):213-21.
[Dev Genes Evol. 2003]Development. 2003 Dec; 130(24):5903-14.
[Development. 2003]Mol Biol Evol. 2002 Mar; 19(3):362-6.
[Mol Biol Evol. 2002]Genome Res. 2004 Jul; 14(7):1207-20.
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[Nat Rev Genet. 2004]PLoS Biol. 2005 Jan; 3(1):e7.
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[Development. 2000]Dev Biol. 2004 Oct 15; 274(2):452-61.
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[Development. 2003]Nucleic Acids Res. 1994 Mar 25; 22(6):965-71.
[Nucleic Acids Res. 1994]