* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Evo-Devo: The merging of Evolutionary and Developmental Biology
Epigenetics of diabetes Type 2 wikipedia , lookup
Neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis wikipedia , lookup
Point mutation wikipedia , lookup
Genome evolution wikipedia , lookup
Genetic engineering wikipedia , lookup
Gene desert wikipedia , lookup
Gene expression programming wikipedia , lookup
Gene therapy wikipedia , lookup
Genome (book) wikipedia , lookup
Nutriepigenomics wikipedia , lookup
Gene nomenclature wikipedia , lookup
Gene expression profiling wikipedia , lookup
History of genetic engineering wikipedia , lookup
Polycomb Group Proteins and Cancer wikipedia , lookup
Epigenetics in stem-cell differentiation wikipedia , lookup
Gene therapy of the human retina wikipedia , lookup
Epigenetics of human development wikipedia , lookup
Therapeutic gene modulation wikipedia , lookup
Site-specific recombinase technology wikipedia , lookup
Helitron (biology) wikipedia , lookup
Vectors in gene therapy wikipedia , lookup
Designer baby wikipedia , lookup
Artificial gene synthesis wikipedia , lookup
Evo-Devo: The merging of Evolutionary and Developmental Biology Eddy M. De Robertis HHMI/UCLA, USA 1) Cell differentiation self-regulates during animal development. 2) Conserved ancestral gene networks control development of the Antero-Posterior (A-P) and Dorso-Ventral (D-V) embryonic axes. 3) Evolution has been channeled by an ancestral “primeval genome” tool-kit shared by all animals. Slide 1 Slide 2 The early embryo is a self-regulating field In 1901 Hans Spemann used baby hair ligature to induce twins Slide 3 Self-regulating morphogenetic fields: Ross Harrison, 1918 Ross Harrison Slide 4 The Organizer experiment - 1924 Slide 5 Embryonic induction: tissue differentiations are directed by neighboring cells The discovery of embryonic induction represented the apogee of developmental biology, for which Spemann received the Nobel Prize in 1935. After that, the genetics of Thomas H. Morgan became the preeminent science for the most of the 20th century. Slide 6 Thomas H. Morgan Bithorax, a four-winged Drosophila mutant. Bridges and Morgan, 1923 Slide 7 Edward B. Lewis Homeotic genes specify A-P segment identity in Drosophila. Colinearity between their order in DNA and in the body. Slide 8 Homeobox DNA encodes a DNA-binding protein domain of 60 amino acids called the Homeodomain. Walter Gehring Matthew Scott “A Xenopus laevis gene was cloned on the basis of cross-homology to a region conserved between several Drosophila homeotic genes… This gene could perhaps represent the first developmentcontrolling gene identified in vertebrates.” Carrasco, McGinnis, Gehring and De Robertis, Cell 1984 Slide 9 Hox complexes are conserved between Drosophila and mammals (from De Robertis, Oliver and Wright, Scientific American, 1990) Slide 10 Evo-Devo: the A-P Hox patterning system was conserved Hox-C6, the first vertebrate Hox gene cloned. De Robertis, Cell 2008 Slide 11 Evo-Devo: the common urbilaterian ancestor had a Hox complex with least seven Hox genes. Ur = Primeval Bilateria = all bilateral animals (30 phyla) De Robertis & Sasai, Nature 1996 Slide 12 In October 1991, a meeting on “Evolution and Development” was held in Crete in honor of F. Jacob's retirement F. Jacob Slide 13 S. J. Gould Etienne Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire’s lobster - 1822 Slide 14 Slide 15 Chordin is a BMP antagonist required for Spemann organizer function BMP = Bone Morphogenetic Protein Slide 16 Chordin/BMP pathway: a network of interacting extracellular proteins BMP4 Slide 17 The Chordin/BMP network patterns D-V differentiation in vertebrates, Drosophila, and many other animals. De Robertis, Cell 2008 Slide 18 Evo-Devo: Urbilateria used the Chordin/BMP/Tolloid pathway for D-V cell differentiations One common gene tool-kit Slide 19 Owl Insect Coquille Saint-Jacques Sepia Walter Gehring Slide 20 Expression of mouse Pax6 induces ectopic eyes in Drosophila Eyes evolved only once. Slide 21 Musca Hypothetical Cajal and Sanchez, 1915 The ancestral eye was complex. Mammalian retina Slide 22 Evo-Devo: Urbilateria had complex neural circuits One common gene tool-kit Slide 23 Genomes contain the record of our evolutionary history 5 Wnts 7 Wnts 13 Wnts in humans 12 Wnt families in Sea Anemone Gene deletions were common during evolution Slide 24 Developmental control networks placed evolutionary constraints on the animal anatomies that evolved by natural selection Slide 25 Future directions in Evo-Devo: 1) Reconstruct the ancestral animal genomic tool-kit. 2) Retrace the genetic mutations, duplications and deletions that actually caused adaptations in the course of evolution. How has the obligatory use of ancient developmental gene networks channeled these outcomes? 3) Establish how cells integrate positional information within fields of cells to decide when to divide, differentiate or die. Slide 26 In sum, animals evolved through variations in ancestral gene networks hard-wired in our DNA. Slide 27