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Evolution of the regulation of developmental gene expression in blind Mexican cavefish.

Julien LeclercqJorge Torres-PazMaxime PolicarpoFrançois AgnèsSylvie Retaux
Published in: Development (Cambridge, England) (2024)
Developmental evolution and diversification of morphology can arise through changes in the regulation of gene expression or protein-coding sequence. To unravel mechanisms underlying early developmental evolution in cavefish of the species Astyanax mexicanus, we compared transcriptomes of surface-dwelling and blind cave-adapted morphs at the end of gastrulation. Twenty percent of the transcriptome was differentially expressed. Allelic expression ratios in cave X surface hybrids showed that cis-regulatory changes are the quasi-exclusive contributors to inter-morph variations in gene expression. Among a list of 108 genes with change at the cis-regulatory level, we explored the control of expression of rx3, a master eye gene. We discovered that cellular rx3 levels are cis-regulated in a cell-autonomous manner, whereas rx3 domain size depends on non-autonomous Wnt and Bmp signalling. These results highlight how uncoupled mechanisms and regulatory modules control developmental gene expression and shape morphological changes. Finally, a transcriptome-wide search for fixed coding mutations and differential exon usage suggested that variations in coding sequence have a minor contribution. Thus, during early embryogenesis, changes in gene expression regulation are the main drivers of cavefish developmental evolution.
Keyphrases
  • gene expression
  • dna methylation
  • genome wide
  • transcription factor
  • single cell
  • poor prognosis
  • stem cells
  • amino acid
  • cell proliferation
  • rna seq
  • cell therapy
  • long non coding rna