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Discovery of a genetic module essential for assigning left-right asymmetry in humans and ancestral vertebrates.

Emmanuelle Szenker-RaviTim OttMuznah KhatooAnne Moreau de BellaingWei Xuan GohYan Ling ChongAnja BeckersDarshini KannesanGuillaume LouvelPriyanka AnujanVydianathan RaviCarine BonnardSebastien MouttonPatric SchoenMélanie FradinEstelle ColinAndre MegarbaneLinda DaouGhassan ChehabSylvie Di FilippoCaroline RooryckJean François DeleuzeAnne Boland-AugeNicolas ArribardRukiye EkerSumanty TohariAlvin Yu-Jin NgMarlène RioChun Teck LimBirgit EisenhaberFrank EisenhaberByrappa VenkateshJeanne AmielHugues Roest CrolliusChristopher T GordonAchim GosslerSudipto RoyTania Attie-BitachMartin BlumPatrice BouvagnetBruno Reversade
Published in: Nature genetics (2021)
The vertebrate left-right axis is specified during embryogenesis by a transient organ: the left-right organizer (LRO). Species including fish, amphibians, rodents and humans deploy motile cilia in the LRO to break bilateral symmetry, while reptiles, birds, even-toed mammals and cetaceans are believed to have LROs without motile cilia. We searched for genes whose loss during vertebrate evolution follows this pattern and identified five genes encoding extracellular proteins, including a putative protease with hitherto unknown functions that we named ciliated left-right organizer metallopeptide (CIROP). Here, we show that CIROP is specifically expressed in ciliated LROs. In zebrafish and Xenopus, CIROP is required solely on the left side, downstream of the leftward flow, but upstream of DAND5, the first asymmetrically expressed gene. We further ascertained 21 human patients with loss-of-function CIROP mutations presenting with recessive situs anomalies. Our findings posit the existence of an ancestral genetic module that has twice disappeared during vertebrate evolution but remains essential for distinguishing left from right in humans.
Keyphrases
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