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Evidence for Deep Regulatory Similarities in Early Developmental Programs across Highly Diverged Insects

Many genes familiar from Drosophila development, such as the so-called gap, pair-rule, and segment polarity genes, play important roles in the development of other insects and in many cases appear to be deployed in a similar fashion, despite the fact that Drosophila-like “long germband” development...

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Autores principales: Kazemian, Majid, Suryamohan, Kushal, Chen, Jia-Yu, Zhang, Yinan, Samee, Md. Abul Hassan, Halfon, Marc S., Sinha, Saurabh
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4217690/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25173756
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evu184
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author Kazemian, Majid
Suryamohan, Kushal
Chen, Jia-Yu
Zhang, Yinan
Samee, Md. Abul Hassan
Halfon, Marc S.
Sinha, Saurabh
author_facet Kazemian, Majid
Suryamohan, Kushal
Chen, Jia-Yu
Zhang, Yinan
Samee, Md. Abul Hassan
Halfon, Marc S.
Sinha, Saurabh
author_sort Kazemian, Majid
collection PubMed
description Many genes familiar from Drosophila development, such as the so-called gap, pair-rule, and segment polarity genes, play important roles in the development of other insects and in many cases appear to be deployed in a similar fashion, despite the fact that Drosophila-like “long germband” development is highly derived and confined to a subset of insect families. Whether or not these similarities extend to the regulatory level is unknown. Identification of regulatory regions beyond the well-studied Drosophila has been challenging as even within the Diptera (flies, including mosquitoes) regulatory sequences have diverged past the point of recognition by standard alignment methods. Here, we demonstrate that methods we previously developed for computational cis-regulatory module (CRM) discovery in Drosophila can be used effectively in highly diverged (250–350 Myr) insect species including Anopheles gambiae, Tribolium castaneum, Apis mellifera, and Nasonia vitripennis. In Drosophila, we have successfully used small sets of known CRMs as “training data” to guide the search for other CRMs with related function. We show here that although species-specific CRM training data do not exist, training sets from Drosophila can facilitate CRM discovery in diverged insects. We validate in vivo over a dozen new CRMs, roughly doubling the number of known CRMs in the four non-Drosophila species. Given the growing wealth of Drosophila CRM annotation, these results suggest that extensive regulatory sequence annotation will be possible in newly sequenced insects without recourse to costly and labor-intensive genome-scale experiments. We develop a new method, Regulus, which computes a probabilistic score of similarity based on binding site composition (despite the absence of nucleotide-level sequence alignment), and demonstrate similarity between functionally related CRMs from orthologous loci. Our work represents an important step toward being able to trace the evolutionary history of gene regulatory networks and defining the mechanisms underlying insect evolution.
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spelling pubmed-42176902014-11-05 Evidence for Deep Regulatory Similarities in Early Developmental Programs across Highly Diverged Insects Kazemian, Majid Suryamohan, Kushal Chen, Jia-Yu Zhang, Yinan Samee, Md. Abul Hassan Halfon, Marc S. Sinha, Saurabh Genome Biol Evol Research Article Many genes familiar from Drosophila development, such as the so-called gap, pair-rule, and segment polarity genes, play important roles in the development of other insects and in many cases appear to be deployed in a similar fashion, despite the fact that Drosophila-like “long germband” development is highly derived and confined to a subset of insect families. Whether or not these similarities extend to the regulatory level is unknown. Identification of regulatory regions beyond the well-studied Drosophila has been challenging as even within the Diptera (flies, including mosquitoes) regulatory sequences have diverged past the point of recognition by standard alignment methods. Here, we demonstrate that methods we previously developed for computational cis-regulatory module (CRM) discovery in Drosophila can be used effectively in highly diverged (250–350 Myr) insect species including Anopheles gambiae, Tribolium castaneum, Apis mellifera, and Nasonia vitripennis. In Drosophila, we have successfully used small sets of known CRMs as “training data” to guide the search for other CRMs with related function. We show here that although species-specific CRM training data do not exist, training sets from Drosophila can facilitate CRM discovery in diverged insects. We validate in vivo over a dozen new CRMs, roughly doubling the number of known CRMs in the four non-Drosophila species. Given the growing wealth of Drosophila CRM annotation, these results suggest that extensive regulatory sequence annotation will be possible in newly sequenced insects without recourse to costly and labor-intensive genome-scale experiments. We develop a new method, Regulus, which computes a probabilistic score of similarity based on binding site composition (despite the absence of nucleotide-level sequence alignment), and demonstrate similarity between functionally related CRMs from orthologous loci. Our work represents an important step toward being able to trace the evolutionary history of gene regulatory networks and defining the mechanisms underlying insect evolution. Oxford University Press 2014-08-29 /pmc/articles/PMC4217690/ /pubmed/25173756 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evu184 Text en © The Author(s) 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kazemian, Majid
Suryamohan, Kushal
Chen, Jia-Yu
Zhang, Yinan
Samee, Md. Abul Hassan
Halfon, Marc S.
Sinha, Saurabh
Evidence for Deep Regulatory Similarities in Early Developmental Programs across Highly Diverged Insects
title Evidence for Deep Regulatory Similarities in Early Developmental Programs across Highly Diverged Insects
title_full Evidence for Deep Regulatory Similarities in Early Developmental Programs across Highly Diverged Insects
title_fullStr Evidence for Deep Regulatory Similarities in Early Developmental Programs across Highly Diverged Insects
title_full_unstemmed Evidence for Deep Regulatory Similarities in Early Developmental Programs across Highly Diverged Insects
title_short Evidence for Deep Regulatory Similarities in Early Developmental Programs across Highly Diverged Insects
title_sort evidence for deep regulatory similarities in early developmental programs across highly diverged insects
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4217690/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25173756
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evu184
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