Artículo de revista
The Irx gene family in zebrafish: genomic structure, evolution and initial characterization of irx5b
Fecha
2004-04-03Registro en:
DEVELOPMENT GENES AND EVOLUTION, Volume: 214, Issue: 6, Pages: 277-284, 2004
0949-944X
Autor
Feijóo, Carmen Gloria
Manzanares, Miguel
Calle Mustienes, Elisa de la
Gómez Skarmeta, José Luis
Allende Connelly, Miguel
Institución
Resumen
Genes of the iroquois (Iro/Irx) family are
highly conserved from Drosophila to mammals and they
have been implicated in a number of developmental
processes. In flies, the Iro genes participate in patterning
events in the early larva and in imaginal disk specification.
In vertebrates, the Irx genes regulate developmental
events during gastrulation, nervous system regionalization,
activation of proneural genes and organ patterning.
The Iro genes in Drosophila and the Irx genes of mammals
show a clustered organization in the genome. Flies
have a single cluster comprising three genes while mammals
have two clusters also having three genes each.
Moreover, experimental evidence in flies shows that transcriptional
regulatory elements are shared among genes
within the Iro cluster, suggesting that the same may be
true in vertebrates. To date, the genomic organization of
the Irx genes in non-mammalian species has not been
studied. In this work, we have isolated the irx5b gene
from zebrafish, Danio rerio, and have characterized its
expression pattern. Furthermore, we have identified the
complete set of Irx genes in two fish species, the zebrafish
and pufferfish, Takifugu rubripes, and have determined
the genomic organization of these genes. Our analysis
indicates that early in fish evolutionary history, the Irx
gene clusters have been duplicated and that subsequent
events have maintained the clustered organization for
some of the genes, while others have been lost. In total
there are 11 existing Irx genes in zebrafish and 10 in
pufferfish. We propose a new nomenclature for the zebrafish
Irx genes based on the analysis of their sequences
and their genomic relationships.