23 research outputs found
Directed Neural Differentiation of Mouse Embryonic Stem Cells Is a Sensitive System for the Identification of Novel Hox Gene Effectors
The evolutionarily conserved Hox family of homeodomain transcription factors
plays fundamental roles in regulating cell specification along the anterior
posterior axis during development of all bilaterian animals by controlling cell
fate choices in a highly localized, extracellular signal and cell context
dependent manner. Some studies have established downstream target genes in
specific systems but their identification is insufficient to explain either the
ability of Hox genes to direct homeotic transformations or the
breadth of their patterning potential. To begin delineating Hox
gene function in neural development we used a mouse ES cell based system that
combines efficient neural differentiation with inducible Hoxb1 expression. Gene
expression profiling suggested that Hoxb1 acted as both
activator and repressor in the short term but predominantly as a repressor in
the long run. Activated and repressed genes segregated in distinct processes
suggesting that, in the context examined, Hoxb1 blocked
differentiation while activating genes related to early developmental processes,
wnt and cell surface receptor linked signal transduction and cell-to-cell
communication. To further elucidate aspects of Hoxb1 function
we used loss and gain of function approaches in the mouse and chick embryos. We
show that Hoxb1 acts as an activator to establish the full expression domain of
CRABPI and II in rhombomere 4 and as a
repressor to restrict expression of Lhx5 and
Lhx9. Thus the Hoxb1 patterning activity
includes the regulation of the cellular response to retinoic acid and the delay
of the expression of genes that commit cells to neural differentiation. The
results of this study show that ES neural differentiation and inducible
Hox gene expression can be used as a sensitive model system
to systematically identify Hox novel target genes, delineate
their interactions with signaling pathways in dictating cell fate and define the
extent of functional overlap among different Hox genes
Insights into Hox Protein Function from a Large Scale Combinatorial Analysis of Protein Domains
Protein function is encoded within protein sequence and protein domains. However, how protein domains cooperate within a protein to modulate overall activity and how this impacts functional diversification at the molecular and organism levels remains largely unaddressed. Focusing on three domains of the central class Drosophila Hox transcription factor AbdominalA (AbdA), we used combinatorial domain mutations and most known AbdA developmental functions as biological readouts to investigate how protein domains collectively shape protein activity. The results uncover redundancy, interactivity, and multifunctionality of protein domains as salient features underlying overall AbdA protein activity, providing means to apprehend functional diversity and accounting for the robustness of Hox-controlled developmental programs. Importantly, the results highlight context-dependency in protein domain usage and interaction, allowing major modifications in domains to be tolerated without general functional loss. The non-pleoitropic effect of domain mutation suggests that protein modification may contribute more broadly to molecular changes underlying morphological diversification during evolution, so far thought to rely largely on modification in gene cis-regulatory sequences
Three Drosophila Hox Complex microRNAs Do Not Have Major Effects on Expression of Evolutionarily Conserved Hox Gene Targets during Embryogenesis
The discovery of microRNAs has resulted in a major expansion of the number of molecules known to be involved in gene regulation. Elucidating the functions of animal microRNAs has posed a significant challenge as their target interactions with messenger RNAs do not adhere to simple rules. Of the thousands of known animal microRNAs, relatively few microRNA:messenger RNA regulatory interactions have been biologically validated in an normal organismal context. Here we present evidence that three microRNAs from the Hox complex in Drosophila (miR-10-5p, miR-10-3p, miR-iab-4-5p) do not have significant effects during embryogenesis on the expression of Hox genes that contain high confidence microRNAs target sites in the 3′ untranslated regions of their messenger RNAs. This is significant, in that it suggests that many predicted microRNA-target interactions may not be biologically relevant, or that the outcomes of these interactions may be so subtle that mutants may only show phenotypes in specific contexts, such as in environmental stress conditions, or in combinations with other microRNA mutations