The fin-to-limb transition in vertebrate evolution has been central to the study of how development underlies evolutionary change. In this context, the functional analysis of Hox gene regulation to infer evolutionary trajectories has been critical to explain the origin of new features. In tetrapods, the transcription of Hoxd genes in developing digits depends on a set of enhancers forming a large regulatory landscape(1,2). The presence of a syntenic counterpart in zebrafish, which lacks digits, suggests deep homology(3) or shared developmental foundations underlying distal fin and limbs. However, how this regulatory program evolved has remained unresolved. We genetically evaluated the function of the zebrafish Hoxd regulatory landscapes by comparatively assessing the effects of their full deletions. We show that, unlike in mice, deletion of these regions in fish does not disrupt hoxd gene transcription during distal fin development. By contrast, we found that this deficiency leads to the loss of expression within the cloaca, a structure related by ancestry to the mammalian urogenital sinus, and that distal hox13 genes are essential for correct cloacal formation. Because Hoxd gene regulation in the mouse urogenital sinus relies on enhancers located in this same chromatin domain that controls digit development, we propose that the current regulatory landscape active in distal limbs was co-opted as a whole in tetrapods from a pre-existing cloacal regulatory machinery.
Co-option of an ancestral cloacal regulatory landscape during digit evolution.
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作者:Hintermann Aurélie, Bolt Christopher C, Hawkins M Brent, Valentin Guillaume, Lopez-Delisle Lucille, Ryan Madeline M, Gitto Sandra, Barrera Gómez Paula, Mascrez Bénédicte, Mansour Thomas A, Nakamura Tetsuya, Harris Matthew P, Shubin Neil H, Duboule Denis
| 期刊: | Nature | 影响因子: | 48.500 |
| 时间: | 2025 | 起止号: | 2025 Dec;648(8092):109-116 |
| doi: | 10.1038/s41586-025-09548-0 | ||
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