1. No more than 14: the end of the amphioxus Hox cluster
- Author
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Elisa Serra, Alicia Hill-Force, Josep Gardenyes, Peter W. H. Holland, Carolina Minguillón, Chris T. Amemiya, L. Filipe C. Castro, and Jordi Garcia-Fernàndez
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Short Research Paper ,gene clusters ,Lineage (evolution) ,2R hypothesis ,Chordate ,010603 evolutionary biology ,01 natural sciences ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Evolution, Molecular ,Chromosome Walking ,03 medical and health sciences ,Chordata, Nonvertebrate ,Branchiostoma floridae ,Gene duplication ,Gene cluster ,Animals ,vertebrate evolution ,Hox gene ,Molecular Biology ,In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Gene Library ,030304 developmental biology ,Genetics ,Cephalochordate ,0303 health sciences ,biology ,Genes, Homeobox ,gene duplication ,Cell Biology ,Cosmids ,biology.organism_classification ,Evolutionary biology ,Multigene Family ,Evx ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
The Hox gene cluster has been a key paradigm for a generation of developmental and evolutionary biologists. Since its discovery in the mid-1980's, the identification, genomic organization, expression, colinearity, and regulation of Hox genes have been immediate targets for study in any new model organism, and metazoan genome projects always refer to the structure of the particular Hox cluster(s). Since the early 1990's, it has been dogma that vertebrate Hox clusters are composed of thirteen paralogous groups. Nonetheless, we showed that in the otherwise prototypical cephalochordate amphioxus (Branchiostoma floridae), the Hox cluster contains a fourteenth Hox gene, and very recently, a 14(th) Hox paralogous group has been found in the coelacanth and the horn shark, suggesting that the amphioxus cluster was anticipating the finding of Hox 14 in some vertebrate lineages. In view of the pivotal place that amphioxus occupies in vertebrate evolution, we thought it of considerable interest to establish the limits of its Hox gene cluster, namely resolution of whether more Hox genes are present in the amphioxus cluster (e.g., Hox 15). Using two strategies, here we report the completion and characterization of the Hox gene content of the single amphioxus Hox cluster, which encompasses 650 kb from Hox1 to Evx. Our data have important implications for the primordial Hox gene cluster of chordates: the prototypical nature of the single amphioxus Hox cluster makes it unlikely that additional paralogous groups will be found in any chordate lineage. We suggest that 14 is the end.
- Published
- 2005
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