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Replacement of mouse Sox10 by the Drosophila ortholog Sox100B provides evidence for co-option of SoxE proteins into vertebrate-specific gene-regulatory networks through altered expression

Authors :
Silke Schreiner
Michael Wegner
Elisabeth Sock
Susanne Kellerer
Julia Hornig
Steven Russell
François Cossais
Michael R. Bösl
Source :
Developmental Biology. (1):267-281
Publisher :
Elsevier Inc.

Abstract

Neural crest cells and oligodendrocytes as the myelinating glia of the central nervous system exist only in vertebrates. Their development is regulated by complex regulatory networks, of which the SoxE-type high-mobility-group domain transcription factors Sox8, Sox9 and Sox10 are essential components. Here we analyzed by in ovo electroporation in chicken and by gene replacement in the mouse whether the Drosophila ortholog Sox100B can functionally substitute for vertebrate SoxE proteins. Sox100B overexpression in the chicken neural tube led to the induction of neural crest cells as previously observed for vertebrate SoxE proteins. Furthermore, many aspects of neural crest and oligodendrocyte development were surprisingly normal in mice in which the Sox10 coding information was replaced by Sox100B arguing that Sox100B integrates well into the gene-regulatory networks that drive these processes. Our results therefore provide strong evidence for a model in which SoxE proteins were co-opted to these gene-regulatory networks mainly through the acquisition of novel expression patterns. However, later developmental defects in several neural crest derived lineages in mice homozygous for the Sox100B replacement allele indicate that some degree of functional specialization and adaptation of SoxE protein properties have taken place in addition to the co-option event.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00121606
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Developmental Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a62151ca3f33d7202e238fcc728e75e8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ydbio.2010.01.038