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Simple Animals, Complex Genomes Comparative genomics of sponges, sea anemones, and multicellular pancakes Mansi Srivastava Rokhsar Lab, Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, UC Berkeley Reddien Lab, Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research 02.23.13 Outline 1. Introduction 2. Insights from genomic analyses 3. Linking genomic complexity to biological complexity What is the genomic basis for the difference in complexity? BILATERIANS PLACOZOAN S SPONGES CNIDARIANS bilateral symmetry, centralized nervous system true muscle true gut nervous system tissue grade ? multicellularity Three species were selected for genome sequencing SEA ANEMONE PLACOZOAN SPONGE Nematostella vectensis is a sea anemone Nematostella is a great lab rat (Finnerty et al. 2004) Trichoplax is a placozoan (photo credits: Ana Signorovitch, Michael Eitel, Bernd Schierwater) Amphimedon queenslandica is a sponge Adult Larvae (photo credits: Bernie Degnan) These animal genomes have been sequenced using a Whole Genome Shotgun strategy ATTTGCATGCGTAATTCAAT CGTAATTCAATGTGTGATTC ATTTGCATGCGTAATTCAAT CGTAATTCAATGTGTGATTC ATTTGCATGCGTAATTCAATGTGTGATTC These animal genomes have different sizes, but the numbers of genes/proteins are in the same ballpark Genome exon intron Genes Proteins Nematostella (cnidarian) Trichoplax (placozoan) Amphimedon (sponge) Human C. elegans (nematode) Drosophila (fruit fly) Genome size (Mb) 450 98 190 3,000 97 120 Gene Models ~18,000 ~11,500 ~24,000 ~20,000 ~20,000 ~14,000 Before comparing their genomes, we need to know how these animals are related to each other and to us * * * BILATERIANS Not an ancient animal gene * * * BILATERIANS Ancient animal gene Lost in sponges Orthologous protein sequences can reveal how organisms are related to each other RLKMTPIR PIDWDCMW MTLPDCMW fly fish RKLPDCMW human mouse Live birth, hair, warm blood, four chambered heart vertebrae RLKMTPIR PIDWDCMW MTLPDCMW RKLPDCMW Placozoans represent a sister lineage to cnidarians and bilaterians Cnidaria Bilateria Animals Whole-genome data can resolve early animal relationships BILATERIANS SPONGES PLACOZOAN S CNIDARIANS bilateral symmetry, centralized nervous system true muscle true gut nervous system tissue grade multicellularity Previously, some developmental processes were thought to be conserved in the bilaterian ancestor A-P patterning Hox complex Gene structure or genome organization (except for the Hox cluster) were not known to be ancient How do the structures of genes compare between animal genomes? Genome exon Genes Proteins intron Sea anemones, placozoans, and sponges have preserved many (>80%) ancient introns (this is not the case for flies and nematodes, which have lost a majority of ancestral metazoan introns) (in collaboration with Uffe Hellsten) What about how genes are organized relative to each other? The positions of orthologous genes can be compared between two species “dot plot view” Fly Insect abd-B lab pb dfd scr antp ubx abd-A abd-B abd-A Ubx Antp hox6 hox8 hox1 hox2 hox3 hox4hox5 hox7 Scr Dfd pb lab Mammal hox 1 2 3 4 5 6 Mouse 7 8 9 10 11 Human Chr 1 Gene order conservation decreases with evolutionary distance 1 3 Mouse 4 3 8 21 Chicken 23 VIII X Stickleback Synteny “same thread” genes present on the same chromosome Human No chromosome scale synteny is observed between vertebrates and flies Drosophila Nematostella, Trichoplax, and Amphimedon scaffolds show conserved synteny with human chromosome segments (Nik Putnam) There is considerable scrambling of gene order in these blocks of conserved synteny (Nik Putnam) What is the significance of this conserved synteny? Another way to compare genomes is in terms of gene content… Trichoplax has genes for neurons and epithelial cells Trichoplax has genes for developmental signaling pathways Early animal lineages may lack certain cell types or biological processes, but their genomes encode the proteins required for these in bilaterians Many “important” genes are involved in processes essential for animal multicellularity Six hallmarks of animal multicellularity: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Regulated cell cycle and growth Programmed cell death Cell-cell and cell-matrix adhesion Allorecognition and innate immunity Specialization of cell types Developmental signaling Comparing early animal genomes allows us to study the temporal origins of animal biology Six hallmarks of animal multicellularit 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Regulated cell cycle and growth Programmed cell death Cell-cell and cell-matrix adhesion Developmental signaling Allorecognition and innate immunity Specialization of cell types Some essential controls on the cell cycle evolved when animals first appeared A-P patterning, Hox complex Early animal genomes are (in some ways) more similar to our genome than are the genomes of flies and nematodes SPONGES PLACOZOAN S CNIDARIANS BILATERIANS A-P patterning Hox complex Metazoan “toolkit” Most signaling pathway and transcription factor families, intron-exon structure, genome organization Explanations for differences in complexity SPONGES PLACOZOAN S CNIDARIANS BILATERIANS microRNAs? cis-regulation? larger families? A-P patterning Hox complex Most signaling pathway and transcription factor families, intron-exon structure, genome organization Differences in the numbers of some types of genes do correlate with complexity Explanations for differences in complexity SPONGES PLACOZOAN S CNIDARIANS BILATERIANS microRNAs? cis-regulation? larger families? A-P patterning Hox complex Cell types patterned in complex ways? Most signaling pathway and transcription factor families, intron-exon structure, genome organization Summary Animals evolved a “toolkit” of genes very early in their evolution Early animal genomes are complex! (as are these animals) Though not all questions are answered by the genomes, they are essential tools for finding the remaining answers Acknowledgements Dan Rokhsar Nik Putnam, Oleg Simakov Jarrod Chapman, Emina Begovic Therese Mitros, Uffe Hellsten Heather Marlow and Mark Martindale (U. Hawaii) Kai Kamm, Michael Eitel, Bernd Schierwater (Hanover) Ana Signorovitch, Maria Moreno, Leo Buss, Stephen Dellaporta (Yale) Degnan group (U. Queensland), Kosik group (UC Santa Barbara) Peter Reddien Jessica Witchley, Kathleen Mazza Members of the Reddien Lab Ulf Jondelius, Swedish Museum of Natural History Wolfgang Sterrer, Bermuda Natural History Museum