evolution of development - professor carol lee's ... of development: evolution of animal body...

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12/8/16 1 Origin of Animals 1 Evolution of Development: Evolution of Animal Body Plans as an Example Or, another way to conceptualize today’s lecture: Evolution of Gene Regulatory Networks: Evolution of Development as an Example What is an Animal? What makes them different from other organisms? When did they Evolve? How did they Evolve? Multicellular (metazoan) Heterotrophic (eat, not photo or chemosynthetic) Eukaryote No Cell Walls, have collagen Nervous tissue, muscle tissue Particular Life History-developmental patterns (this lecture) What is an Animal?

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12/8/16

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Origin of Animals

1

EvolutionofDevelopment:EvolutionofAnimalBodyPlansasanExample

Or,anotherwaytoconceptualizetoday’slecture:

EvolutionofGeneRegulatoryNetworks:

EvolutionofDevelopmentasanExample

• WhatisanAnimal?• Whatmakesthemdifferentfromotherorganisms?

• WhendidtheyEvolve?• HowdidtheyEvolve?

Multicellular (metazoan)Heterotrophic (eat, not photo or chemosynthetic)

Eukaryote

No Cell Walls, have collagenNervous tissue, muscle tissue

Particular Life History-developmental patterns (this lecture)

WhatisanAnimal?

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• http://www.wimp.com/planktonlife/

Aretheredifferencesbetweenplantandanimalevolution?

• Greaterdiversityinsexualsystemsinplants

– Abundantasexuality

• Morechemistrylessbehaviorinplants

• Developmentislessrigidandregulatedinplants:perhapsallowingformoreevolutionby“hopefulmonsters,”asdevelopmentalabnormalitiesaremoretolerableinplants

• Polyploidyistoleratedmorereadilyandcommoninplants

Outline• Today:Biggerpictureonhowradicalchangesinbodyplancomeabout

• EvolutionofDevelopment• EvolutionofDevelopmentalGeneRegulatoryNetworks(GRNs)

• HierarchyinEvolutionofGRNs• EvolutionofGRNs leadingtoevolutionofmajorphylogeneticbreaksinEarthHistory

Outline

• NextLectures:HumanEvolution…agreatexampleofEvolutionofDevelopment

• Mostdifferencesbetweenhumansandotherprimatesareduetoevolutionarychangesatafewdevelopmentalgenes

Reviewconceptsfrompreviouslectures:

• cis- andtrans-regulation• Transcriptionfactors• Pleiotropy• CambrianExplosion• Phylogeny

EvolutionofDevelopment:

• Whatisit?

• Howcanitleadtoevolutionofradicalchangesinbodyplan?

• Howcandifferenttypesofdevelopmentalchanges(mutationsatdifferentdevelopmentalstages)leadtodifferenthierarchicalevolutionarychanges(thatdistinguishphylum,class,order,family,genus,species)?

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OntogenyRecapitulatesPhylogenyErnstHaeckel(1834-1919)

• Ontogenyisthecourseofdevelopmentofanorganismfromfertilizedeggtoadult;phylogenyistheevolutionaryhistoryofagroupoforganisms.

• Haeckelobservedthatasembryosofvertebratesdeveloped,theypassedthroughstagesthatresembledtheadultphaseofmoreancestral(“primitive”)organisms.Forexample,atonepointeachhumanembryohasgillsandresemblesatadpole.

• Haeckel’sideawasthataspecies’biologicaldevelopment,orontogeny,parallelsandsummarizesthespecies’evolutionaryhistory,orphylogeny

OntogenyRecapitulatesPhylogenyErnstHaeckel(1834-1919)

• Someofhisanalogieshavebeendiscredited(infavorofVonBaer’sideas)

• However,Haeckel'sgeneralconcept,thatthedevelopmentalprocessrevealssomecluesaboutevolutionaryhistory,appearstoholdfortheevolutionofdevelopmentalgenes.

Romanes's 1892copyofErnstHaeckel’sembryonicdrawings

TheCambrianExplosion

65mya:CretaceousExtinction(dinosaursgoextinct)

230 mya: Permian Extinction

570 mya: Cambrian Explosion

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EvolutionofAnimalBodyPlans

• TrueTissues• TissueLayers(Diplo vs Triploblasts)• BodySymmetry• Evolutionofbodycavity(Coelom)• EvolutionofDevelopment

Cambrian Explosion

Howcouldthishappen?(geneticmechanism?)

TheEvolutionofDevelopment(Freeman&Herron,Chapter19)

• ThetremendousincreaseindiversityduringtheCambrianexplosionappearstohavebeencausedbyevolutionofdevelopmentalgenes

• Changesindevelopmentalgenescanresultinradicallynewmorphologicalforms

• Developmentalgenescontroltherate,timing,andspatialpatternofchangesinanorganism’sformasitdevelopsintoanadult

• ThediscoveryofHox genes– Notthe“mostimportant”devgenes– Nottheonlydevelopmentalgenes– But,amongthefirststudied

Hox genesaretypesofHomeotic genes,whicharegenesthatcontrolthepatternsandorderofdevelopmentinplantsandanimals.Forexample,homeoticgenesareinvolvedindeterminingwhere,when,andhowbodysegmentsdevelopinorganisms.

ExamplesofHomeotic genes:Hox genes,paraHox genes,MADS-boxcontaininggenes,etc.

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Changesinafewregulatorygenescouldhavebigimpacts

• Mostnewfeaturesofmulticellularorganismsarisewhenpreexistingcelltypesappearatnewlocations ornewtimes intheembryo.

• Changesinthespecificationofcellfates areamajormechanismfortheevolutionofdifferentorganismalforms.

• Forexample,smallchangesingeneregulationcouldcausechangesintimingofdevelopmentalevents(heterochrony),whichcouldthenleadtodramaticchangesinmorphology

• StephanJayGouldin1977proposedthisasamechanismforevolutionarychange

So,whathappenedduringtheCambrianExplosion?

AllmajorAnimalPhyla(differentbodyplans)evolvedwithinarelativelynarrowwindowoftime

(1)Precambrian-PaleozoicBoundary (~570MYA)

Cambrian Explosion

Prec

ambr

ian

Cambrian

1400

1200

1000

800

600

Mol

lusc

a

Ann

elid

aA

rthro

poda

Ech

inod

erm

ata

Agn

atha

Gna

thos

tom

ata

200

0Million Years Ago

Wray et al. 1996

BasedonphylogenyofanimalsbasedonDNAsequencedata,theradiationofanimalspredatesthegeologicalrecordoftheCambrianExplosion

“CambrianExplosion”Howcandifferenttypesofdevelopmentalchangesleadtodifferenthierarchicalevolutionarychanges(thatdistinguishphylum,class,order,family,genus,species)

TheGrandMystery

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WhyhastherehasbeensolittlechangeinanimalbodyplanssincetheCambrianExplosion???

TheGrandMystery

Davidson&Erwin.2006.GeneRegulatoryNetworksandtheEvolutionofAnimalBodyPlans.Science.311:796-800.

Bigphylogeny

“Kernels”

“GeneBatteries”

1. ‘‘Kernels’’oftheGRN: Evolutionarilyinflexiblesubcircuits (ofregulatorygenes)thatperformessentialupstreamfunctionsinbuildinggivenbodypartsàmaindifferencesamongphyla

2. ‘‘Plug-ins’’oftheGRN: Certainsmallsubcircuits (ofregulatorygenes),thathavebeenrepeatedlyco-optedfordiversedevelopmentalpurposes

3. Input/Output(I/O)deviceswithintheGRN: Switchesthatallowordisallowdevelopmentalsubcircuits tofunctioninagivencontext(e.g.Hox genes)

4. DifferentiationGeneBatteries: Consistofgroupsofprotein-codinggenesundercommonregulatorycontrol,theproductsofwhichexecutecelltype–specificfunctionsà Speciesdifferences

DifferentHierarchicalComponentsofGeneRegulatoryNetworks

First,BasicsonDevelopmentalGeneRegulatoryNetworks

DevelopmentalGeneRegulatoryNetwork

• ThebindingoftranscriptionfactorstoregulatoryDNAsequencescontrolsthespatialandtemporalexpressionofgenesinthedevelopingorganism

• Becauseeachtranscriptionfactorregulatestheexpressionofmultiplegenes,regulatorygeneinteractionsformanetwork.

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S.Sinha

DevelopmentalGeneRegulatoryNetwork

• ThebindingoftranscriptionfactorstoregulatoryDNAsequencescontrolsthespatialandtemporalexpressionofgenesinthedevelopingorganism

• Becauseeachtranscriptionfactorregulatestheexpressionofmultiplegenes,regulatorygeneinteractionsformanetwork.

DevelopmentalGeneRegulatoryNetwork

Exampleshownforneuraldevelopment

DevelopmentalGeneRegulatoryNetworks(GRNs)

• Developmentiscontrolleddirectlybyprogressivechangesintheregulatorystateinthespatialdomainsofthedevelopingorganism.

• Asregulatorygenesregulateoneanotheraswellasothergenes,andbecauseeveryregulatorygenerespondstomultipleinputswhileregulatingmultipleothergenes,thetotalmapoftheirinteractionshastheformofanetwork.

• GeneRegulatoryNetworksconsistof:• Regulatorygenes,whichencodetranscriptionfactors• Signalinggenes,whichencodeligands andreceptorsforintercellularcommunication

Whatkindofevolutionarychanges(i.e.mutations)leadtotheevolution

ofGeneRegulatoryNetworks?

EvolutionaryChangeswithintheGeneRegulatoryNetworks• DevelopmentalBiologistshavehypothesizedthatmostchangeswithinregulatorynetworkswouldbe cis-regulatory (e.g.promoter,enhanceratthegene)

• Thereasonisthatcis-regulatorychangeswouldonlychangetheexpressionofonegene

• Ontheotherhand,Trans-regulatorychangesareoftenoverlypleiotropic,andthusdon’toccurasoften.But,whentheyoccur,theyhaveprofoundeffects.

• So,developmentalevolutionarychangeshavebeenassumedtobemostlycis-regulatory.

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DevelopmentalGeneRegulatoryNetworks(GRNs)

• Comparativedevelopmentalevidenceindicatesthatreorganizationsindevelopmentalgeneregulatorynetworks(GRNs)underlieevolutionarychangesinanimalmorphology,includingbodyplans.

• ThenatureoftheevolutionaryalterationsthatarisefromregulatorychangesdependsonthehierarchicalpositionofthechangewithinaGRN.

DevelopmentalGeneRegulatoryNetworks(GRNs)

• GRNs arehierarchical,sothattheportionscontrollingtheinitialstagesofdevelopmentareatthetopofthehierarchy(earlyindevelopment),theportionscontrollingintermediateprocessesofspatialsubdivisionortheformationoffuturemorphologicalpatternareinthemiddle,andtheportionscontrollingthedetailedfunctionsofcelldifferentiationandmorphogenesisareattheperiphery.

DevelopmentalGeneRegulatoryNetwork

Exampleshownforneuraldevelopment

Thefundamentaldifferences

“Kernels”

“GeneBatteries”

Developmentoccursthroughasequenceofevents

• DuringDevelopment,regulationofgeneexpressioniscriticalfordeterminingthedifferentialfateofgeneticallyidenticalcells

• Morphologicalpatterningduringthecourseofdevelopment:Generalàmoredetailed

• Developmentalchangesleadtodivergenceatdifferenthierarchicallevelsfromthemoreupstream“kernels”earlyindevelopment,tothemoreperipheral“genebatteries”

• Ontogenyrecapitulatesphylogeny: Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard and Sean Carroll

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OntogenyRecapitulatesPhylogenyErnstHaeckel(1834-1919)

• Haeckel’sideawasthataspecies’biologicaldevelopment,orontogeny,parallelsandsummarizesthespecies’evolutionaryhistory,orphylogeny

• Haeckel'sgeneralconcept,thatthedevelopmentalprocessrevealssomecluesaboutevolutionaryhistory,mightgenerallyholdfortheevolutionofdevelopmentalgenes.

Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard and Sean Carroll

Architecturalchangesinanimalbodyplansmighthavebeenproducedoverthepast600millionyearsbychangesinGRNs (generegulatorynetworks)ofmultipleclasses,withextremelydifferentdevelopmentalconsequencesandratesofoccurrence.

• Themodularsub-circuitsofdevelopmentalGRNs differinevolutionarylability.

• Themostslowlychangingcomponents— calledkernels— consistofhighlyconservedregulatoryinteractionsthatestablishtheprogenitorfieldofadevelopingstructure.

• Theevolutionarystability(constraint)ofkernelscontrastswiththelability(evolvability)ofotherGRNsub-circuits.

EvolutionofGRNs

1. ‘‘Kernels’’oftheGRN: Evolutionarilyinflexiblesubcircuits (ofregulatorygenes)thatperformessentialupstreamfunctionsinbuildinggivenbodypartsàmaindifferencesamongphyla

2. ‘‘Plug-ins’’oftheGRN: Certainsmallsubcircuits (ofregulatorygenes),thathavebeenrepeatedlyco-optedfordiversedevelopmentalpurposes

3. Input/Output(I/O)deviceswithintheGRN: Switchesthatallowordisallowdevelopmentalsubcircuits tofunctioninagivencontext(e.g.Hox genes)

4. DifferentiationGeneBatteries: Consistofgroupsofprotein-codinggenesundercommonregulatorycontrol,theproductsofwhichexecutecelltype–specificfunctionsà Speciesdifferences

DifferentHierarchicalComponentsofGeneRegulatoryNetworks

1. ‘‘Kernels’’oftheGRN: Evolutionarilyinflexible(constrained)subcircuits thatperformessentialupstreamfunctionsinbuildinggivenbodyparts

• Oftendedicatedtomajorformationofbodyparts• Oftensub-circuitofinteractingtranscriptionfactors• Oftenhighlyconstrainedbypleiotropy• Oftencannotundergoevolutionarychangewithout

catastrophiceffects

• Examplesinnextfourslides.OtherpossibleExamples:anteriortoposteriorandmidlinetolateralspecificationofthenervoussystem(indeuterostomes andpossiblyacrossBilateria);eyefield specification[inarthropods];gutregionalization[inchordates];developmentofimmunesystems[acrossBilateria];andregionalizationofthehindbrainandspecificationofneuralcrest[inchordates]

DifferentComponentsofGeneRegulatoryNetworks

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• Kernelsaresub-circuitscomposedofrecursivelywiredregulatorygenes(thatis,theyshareinputsthroughmultiplecis-regulatoryinteractions),whichoperateduringtheinitialphaseofregionalpatternformationforaparticularbodypart.

• Ifanyofthegenesinthesub-circuitarepreventedfromfunctioning,thebodypartfailstodevelop.

• Akernelinteractswithregionalregulatorystatesub-circuits,whichinturnactivateorrepresstheactivityofdifferentiationgenebatteriesattheperipheryoftheGRN(nextfigures).

• TheconservedstructureofdevelopmentalGRNkernelsmightberesponsibleforthephenotypicstabilityofanimalbodyplansthathaspersistedatleastsincetheEarlyCambrianperiod,520millionyearsago.

‘‘Kernels’’oftheGRNEndomesoderm specificationkernel,commontoseaurchinandstarfish,thelastcommonancestorofwhichlivedabouthalfabillionyearsago.

Fiveofthesixgenesinthekernel(allexceptdelta)encodeDNA-recognizingtranscriptionfactors

Thelinkagesarehighlyrecursive.Thecis-regulatorymoduleoftheotx genereceivesinputfromthreeofthefivegenes;thefoxa gene,fromthreeofthefive;andthegatae,foxa,andbragenesfromtwoofthesamefivegenes

Possibleheartspecificationkernels;assembledfrommanyliteraturesources.Dashedlinesshowpossibleinteractions.

Thesenetworksarealsohighlyrecursive

Acoresetofregulatorygenesareusedincommonandarelinkedinasimilarwayinaconservedsubcircuit ofthegenenetworkarchitecture(greyboxes)

GeneralModelforHeartSpecificationKernel

Zebrafish endodermkernel(subcircuit)

Photoshowsgeneexpressionof4transcriptionfactorsthatarepartofthiskernel

Tsengetal.2011

1. blank

2. ‘‘Plug-ins’’oftheGRN: Certainsmallsubcircuits thathavebeenrepeatedlyco-optedfordiversedevelopmentalpurposes

• Notdedicatedtoformationofbodyparts.Instead,theyareinsertedinmanydifferentnetworkswheretheyprovideinputsintoagreatvarietyofregulatoryapparatus.

• Oftenexpresseddifferentiallyinthe(species-specific)terminalphasesofdevelopment

• Theirconnectionsintothenetworkareevolutionarilyverylabile(evolvable)

• Examples:signaltransductionsystems,Wnt,transforminggrowthfactor–b (TGF-b),fibroblastgrowthfactor,Hedgehog,Notch,andepidermalgrowthfactor

DifferentHierarchicalComponentsofGeneRegulatoryNetworks

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SonicHedgehog signalingpathway:

Keyroleinregulatingvertebrateorganogenesis,suchasinthegrowthofdigitsonlimbsandorganizationofthebrain.

SonicHedgehog(yellow)signalingcontrollingneuronalidentityinthedevelopingspinalcord

3. Input/Output(I/O)deviceswithintheGRN:Switchesthatallowordisallowdevelopmentalsubcircuits tofunctioninagivencontext

• Permitorprohibittheoperationoftheregulatorysub-circuits,andsignalsbetweentheregulatorysub-circuits

• Theycanacttopermitorprohibitpatterningsubcircuitsfromactingingivenregionsofananimal.

• Examples:regulationofsizeofhomologousbodyparts.regulationoffateofsegmentsinanimalshox genes,Ubx,pitx2

DifferentHierarchicalComponentsofGeneRegulatoryNetworks

Hox Genes

• Hox genesareexamplesof“Input/OutputDevices”…thatis,operatelike“on/off”switches

• Iftheyare“on”withinananimalregion,theywilldictatethefateofthatsegment

• Hox genesaretranscriptionfactors,whichregulategenesthatinturnregulatelargenetworksofothergenes

Hox Clusters

• Genefamilyformedbygeneduplicationevents

• Hox geneproductsare transcriptionfactors,regulatoryproteinsthatbindtoDNAandcontrolthetranscriptionofothergenes

• Hox genesdeterminetheidentityofsegmentalregionsalongtheanterio-posterioraxisofanimalsduringearlyembryonicdevelopment(e.g.legs,antennae,andwingsinfruitfliesorthedifferentvertebrateribsinhumans)

• Hox genesareaclassofhomeotic genesthatprovidepositionalinformationduringdevelopment

• IfHox genesareexpressedinthewronglocation,bodypartscanbeproducedinthewronglocation

• Forexample,incrustaceans,aswimmingappendagecanbeproducedinasegmentinsteadofafeedingappendage

Hox Genes MutationsinaHox genecausinglegstogrowoutofthehead

In this case, the identity of one head segment has been changed to that of a thoracic segment.

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Hox genes in Drosophila

Hox genestendtobeclusteredalongachromosomeintheorderthattheyareexpressedinmanytaxa(fliesandvertebrates),butnotalltaxa

P.Z.Myers

EvolutionofHox clusters

• HOX-clustersundergoessentialrearrangementsinevolutionofmaintaxa

• Duplication,deletion,divergenceofthegenesleadtodifferentiationinbodyplans

• Otherregulatorygenes/genefamiliesarealsoimportant

Animalbodyplans

EvolutionarychangesinHox Genes

• Newmorphologicalformslikelycomefromgeneduplicationeventsthatproducenewdevelopmentalgenes

• Apossiblemechanismfortheevolutionofsix-leggedinsectsfromamany-leggedcrustaceanancestorhasbeendemonstratedinlabexperiments

• SpecificchangesintheUbxgenehavebeenidentifiedthatcan“turnoff”legdevelopment

Hox gene6 Hox gene7 Hox gene8

About400mya

Drosophila Artemia

Ubx

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Differences in Hox gene expression distinguish the various arthropod segmentation patterns

• EvolutionofvertebratesfrominvertebrateanimalswasassociatedwithalterationsinHox genes

• TwoduplicationsofHox genes arethoughttohaveoccurredinthevertebratelineage

• Theseduplicationsmayhavebeenimportantintheevolutionofnewvertebratecharacteristics

EvolutionofVertebrates(PhylumChordata) • Polyploidizationisprobablythesinglemostimportantmechanismfortheevolutionofmajorlineagesandforspeciationinplants

Multipleroundsofpolyploidization mighthaveoccurredduringtheearlyevolutionofvertebrates

Vertebrates(withjaws)withfourHox clusters

Hypotheticalearlyvertebrates(jawless)withtwoHox clusters

Hypotheticalvertebrateancestor(invertebrate)withasingleHox cluster

SecondHoxduplication

FirstHoxduplication

4.DifferentiationGeneBatteries:

Consistofgroupsoffunctionallylinkedprotein-codinggenesundercommonregulatorycontrol,theproductsofwhichexecutecelltype–specificfunctionsandaremajordeterminantofcellspecializationinmetazoans

Theyareexpressedinthefinalstagesofgivendevelopmentalprocesses.

DifferentHierarchicalComponentsofGeneRegulatoryNetworks

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4.DifferentiationGeneBatteries: Consistofgroupsoffunctionallylinkedprotein-codinggenesundercommonregulatorycontrol,theproductsofwhichexecutecelltype–specificfunctionsandaremajordeterminantofcellspecializationinmetazoans

• ResideattheperipheryofdevelopmentalGRNs,andareexpressedinthefinalstagesofgivendevelopmentalprocesses

• Theydonotregulateothergenes(incontrasttokernelsandplug-ins,whichareentirelyregulatory)

• Theydonotcontroltheprogressiveformationofspatialpatternsofgeneexpressionthatunderliesthebuildingofthebodyplan;inshort,theydonotmakebodyparts.

• Differentiationgenebatteriesbuildmusclecellsandmakeskeletalbiominerals,skin,synaptictransmissionsystems,etc.

DifferentHierarchicalComponentsofGeneRegulatoryNetworks

So....Kernelsofthenetwork:• Kernelsspecifythedomainforeachbodypartinthespatial

coordinatesystemofthepostgastrular embryo•• Highlypleiotropically constrained

o internalrecursivewiring—manylinkageso positionhighinthedevelopmentalnetworkhierarchy

Whensufficientcomparativenetworkdataareavailable,itislikelythatconservednetworkkernelswillbefoundtoprogramtheinitialstagesofdevelopmentofeveryphylum-specificbodypartandperhapsofsuperphylum andpan-bilaterian bodypartsaswell.

EvolutionwithinDevelopmentalGeneRegulatoryNetworks

Incontrast,peripheralregionsoftheGRN(i.e.differentiationgenebatteries)arelesspleiotropicallyconstrained,andmorelikelytoevolve.

Therearenodownstreamconsequencesinchangesatthislevel.

Examples:manycasesofspeciation,manycasesofadaptationtotheenvironment

EvolutionwithinDevelopmentalGeneRegulatoryNetworks

So,notallmutationsareequal:

Mutationsthatareretainedthataffecttheearlierstagesofdevelopment(e.g.kernels)willhavemoreprofoundeffectsonanimalbodyplansthanmutationsthataffecttheterminalstepsofdevelopment(e.g.genebatteries)

Sothen,whydidmassivediversificationofmajorbodyforms(evolutionarychangesinthepleiotropic kernels)occuratthetimeofthe“CambrianExplosion”

Andwhydidsuchchangesnotoccurafterthat?

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Thekernelswouldhaveformedthroughthesameprocessesofevolutionthataffecttheothercomponents(whilenewlineageswereformingduringthelatePre-Cambrian-earlyCambrian),

But,onceformedandoperatingtospecifyparticularbodyparts,kernelstructurewouldhavebecomerefractory(resistant)tosubsequentchange(becauseofthecatastrophiccostsofalteringfundamentalstructures—becausethedevelopmentalpathwayshadalreadybeenlaidout).

MolecularphylogenyplacesthisevolutionarystageinthelateNeoproterozoic whenBilateria begintoappearinthefossilrecord,betweentheendoftheMarinoan glaciation atabout630millionyearsagoandthebeginningoftheCambrian.

Thereforethemechanisticexplanationforthesurprisingfactthatessentiallynomajornewphylum-levelbodypartshaveevolvedsincetheCambrianmaylieintheinternalstructuralandfunctionalpropertiesofGRNkernels:Oncetheywereassembled,theycouldnotbedisassembledorbasicallyrewired,onlybuiltupon.

DiversekindsofchangeinGRNs andtheirdiverseevolutionaryconsequences

Fig.3.Theleftcolumnshowschangesinnetworkcomponents;therightcolumnshowsevolutionaryconsequencesexpected,whichdifferintheirtaxonomiclevel(red).

Bigphylogeny

“Kernals”

“GeneBatteries”

SampleExamQuestions

1. WhichofthefollowingisFALSE regardinghox Genes?(a)Theyservetheroleofdefiningsegmentalregionsalongtheanteriorto

posterioraxisduringdevelopment(b)Theirfunctionshavediversifiedthroughgeneduplicationsfollowedby

differentiation(e.g.subfunctionalization),leadingtodifferentiationofsegmentalregionsinanimals

(c)Theyencodetranscriptionfactorsthatperformtrans-regulatoryfunctions(d)Theyareresponsibleforthemajordifferencesamonganimalphyla(e)Theyfunctionbyallowingordisallowingdevelopmentalsubcircuits to

functionwithinsegmentalregions(likean"on/off"switch)

2. Whichofthefollowingwouldbemostevolutionaryconstrained?

(a)Plug-insoftheGRN(b)KernelsoftheGRN(c)Input/Outputdevices(d)Genebatteries(e)Hox genes

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3.Changesatwhichbelowaremostlikelytoberesponsiblefortheradiationofanimalphyla?

(a)Plug-insoftheGRN(b)SonicHedgehog(c)Input/Outputdevices(d)Genebatteries(e)KernelsoftheGRN

4.Whatarehox geneswithinanindividualanimal?

(a)Orthologs(b)Paralogs(c)Homologs(d)Xenologs(e)Noneoftheabove

5. Developmentalevolutionarydifferencesbetweenhumansandchimpanzeesaremostlikelytobeatthelevelof

(a)Plug-insoftheGRN(b)hox genes(c)Input/Outputdevices(d)Genebatteries(e)Kernels

• 1D• 2B• 3E• 4B• 5D

• OptionalSlides(foryourowninterest)

Differentsub-circuitswithinGeneRegulatoryNetworks

Don’tneedtoknowthis,justshowingasanexample

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Changesthatcanaffectcis-regulatorymodules(CRMs)(canreviewlecturenotesoncis-regulatoryevolution)

• Internalchangesthataffectthefunctionofapre-existingCRMo Singlebase-pairmutationcancausegainofnewbindingsites,lossofsites,orstrengtheningorweakeningofbindingtosites.

o Insertionsanddeletionscanchangethedistancebetweeninteractingsites,causegainorlossofsites,oranincreaseinthecopynumberofgivensites.

o Insertionofmobileelementcarryingregulatorysequencescancausegainorpotentiallossofsite,changeinthedistancebetweeninteractingsitesandincreaseincopynumber,aswellasalterthestrengthofbindingatthesite.

• ChangesthatalterCRMrepertoireofpre-existinggeneso InsertionofCRMs fromelsewhere:carriedbymobileelements,byinversions,bytranslocations,orbyintronic retrotranspositions cancausegainofdevelopmentalfunctionswithoutlossofthegene.

o LossofaCRM:bytranslocation,largedeletion,inversionbreakageorinsertionofmobileelementcancauselossofspecificdevelopmentalfunctionwithoutlossofgene.

• Large-scale rearrangements that produce novel gene–CRM complexeso Regionalduplicationscanresultinsubfunctionalization andneofunctionalization.o Translocationscanbringnewgenesintolargeregulatorydomains.