non-redundant selector and growth-promoting functions of two sister genes, buttonhead and sp1, in drosophila leg development冗余选择器和两个妹妹的促生长功能基因,buttonhead sp1,果蝇腿发展.pdfVIP

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non-redundant selector and growth-promoting functions of two sister genes, buttonhead and sp1, in drosophila leg development冗余选择器和两个妹妹的促生长功能基因,buttonhead sp1,果蝇腿发展.pdf

non-redundant selector and growth-promoting functions of two sister genes, buttonhead and sp1, in drosophila leg development冗余选择器和两个妹妹的促生长功能基因,buttonhead sp1,果蝇腿发展

Non-Redundant Selector and Growth-Promoting Functions of Two Sister Genes, buttonhead and Sp1, in Drosophila Leg Development Carlos Estella, Richard S. Mann* Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics, Columbia University, New York, New York, United States of America Abstract The radically distinct morphologies of arthropod and tetrapod legs argue that these appendages do not share a common evolutionary origin. Yet, despite dramatic differences in morphology, it has been known for some time that transcription factors encoded by the Distalless (Dll)/Dlx gene family play a critical role in the development of both structures. Here we show that a second transcription factor family encoded by the Sp8 gene family, previously implicated in vertebrate limb development, also plays an early and fundamental role in arthropod leg development. By simultaneously removing the function of two Sp8 orthologs, buttonhead (btd) and Sp1, during Drosophila embryogenesis, we find that adult leg development is completely abolished. Remarkably, in the absence of these factors, transformations from ventral to dorsal appendage identities are observed, suggesting that adult dorsal fates become derepressed when ventral fates are eliminated. Further, we show that Sp1 plays a much more important role in ventral appendage specification than btd and that Sp1 lies genetically upstream of Dll. In addition to these selector-like gene functions, Sp1 and btd are also required during larval stages for the growth of the leg. Vertebrate Sp8 can rescue many of the functions of the Drosophila genes, arguing that these activities have been conserved, despite more than 500 million years of independent evolution. These observations suggest that an ancient Sp8/Dlx gene cassette was used in a

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