TY - JOUR
T1 - Lineage-specific evolution of the vertebrate Otopetrin gene family revealed by comparative genomic analyses
AU - Hurle, Belen
AU - Marques-Bonet, Tomas
AU - Antonacci, Francesca
AU - Hughes, Inna
AU - Ryan, Joseph F.
AU - Blakesley, Robert
AU - Bouffard, Gerry
AU - McDowell, Jennifer
AU - Maskeri, Baishali
AU - Hansen, Nancy
AU - Park, Morgan
AU - Thomas, Pamela
AU - Young, Alice
AU - Eichler, Evan E.
AU - Ornitz, David M.
AU - Green, Eric D.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Mariano Rocchi and Mario Ventura (University of Bari) for providing chimpanzee and macaque samples used in the tri-color interphase FISH analyses; Laura Elnitski (NHGRI) for advice about analyzing non-coding conserved sequences; Zhaoshi Jiang (University of Washington) for advice about analyzing the evolutionary breakpoints on chromosome 4p16; Bechara Kachar (NIDCD) for critically reading the manuscript and for insightful discussions; Julia Fekecs and Darryl Leja, Rebecca Chodroff, and Shurjo Sen (NHGRI) for input about figure generation; Jacquelyn K. Beals for the editing; and the three anonymous reviewers for their helpful feedback. We also thank numerous people associated with the NISC Comparative Sequencing Program, in particular Robert Blakesley, Gerry Bouffard, Jennifer McDowell, Baishali Maskeri, Nancy Hansen, Morgan Park, Pamela Thomas, Alice Young, and the many dedicated technicians. This work was supported by the NHGRI Intramural Research Program, NIDCD grant DC02236 (DMO); and NHGRI grants HG002385 and HG0058815 (EEE). EEE is an investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
PY - 2011
Y1 - 2011
N2 - Background. Mutations in the Otopetrin 1 gene (Otop1) in mice and fish produce an unusual bilateral vestibular pathology that involves the absence of otoconia without hearing impairment. The encoded protein, Otop1, is the only functionally characterized member of the Otopetrin Domain Protein (ODP) family; the extended sequence and structural preservation of ODP proteins in metazoans suggest a conserved functional role. Here, we use the tools of sequence- and cytogenetic-based comparative genomics to study the Otop1 and the Otop2-Otop3 genes and to establish their genomic context in 25 vertebrates. We extend our evolutionary study to include the gene mutated in Usher syndrome (USH) subtype 1G (Ush1g), both because of the head-to-tail clustering of Ush1g with Otop2 and because Otop1 and Ush1g mutations result in inner ear phenotypes. Results. We established that OTOP1 is the boundary gene of an inversion polymorphism on human chromosome 4p16 that originated in the common human-chimpanzee lineage more than 6 million years ago. Other lineage-specific evolutionary events included a three-fold expansion of the Otop genes in Xenopus tropicalis and of Ush1g in teleostei fish. The tight physical linkage between Otop2 and Ush1g is conserved in all vertebrates. To further understand the functional organization of the Ushg1-Otop2 locus, we deduced a putative map of binding sites for CCCTC-binding factor (CTCF), a mammalian insulator transcription factor, from genome-wide chromatin immunoprecipitation-sequencing (ChIP-seq) data in mouse and human embryonic stem (ES) cells combined with detection of CTCF-binding motifs. Conclusions. The results presented here clarify the evolutionary history of the vertebrate Otop and Ush1g families, and establish a framework for studying the possible interaction(s) of Ush1g and Otop in developmental pathways.
AB - Background. Mutations in the Otopetrin 1 gene (Otop1) in mice and fish produce an unusual bilateral vestibular pathology that involves the absence of otoconia without hearing impairment. The encoded protein, Otop1, is the only functionally characterized member of the Otopetrin Domain Protein (ODP) family; the extended sequence and structural preservation of ODP proteins in metazoans suggest a conserved functional role. Here, we use the tools of sequence- and cytogenetic-based comparative genomics to study the Otop1 and the Otop2-Otop3 genes and to establish their genomic context in 25 vertebrates. We extend our evolutionary study to include the gene mutated in Usher syndrome (USH) subtype 1G (Ush1g), both because of the head-to-tail clustering of Ush1g with Otop2 and because Otop1 and Ush1g mutations result in inner ear phenotypes. Results. We established that OTOP1 is the boundary gene of an inversion polymorphism on human chromosome 4p16 that originated in the common human-chimpanzee lineage more than 6 million years ago. Other lineage-specific evolutionary events included a three-fold expansion of the Otop genes in Xenopus tropicalis and of Ush1g in teleostei fish. The tight physical linkage between Otop2 and Ush1g is conserved in all vertebrates. To further understand the functional organization of the Ushg1-Otop2 locus, we deduced a putative map of binding sites for CCCTC-binding factor (CTCF), a mammalian insulator transcription factor, from genome-wide chromatin immunoprecipitation-sequencing (ChIP-seq) data in mouse and human embryonic stem (ES) cells combined with detection of CTCF-binding motifs. Conclusions. The results presented here clarify the evolutionary history of the vertebrate Otop and Ush1g families, and establish a framework for studying the possible interaction(s) of Ush1g and Otop in developmental pathways.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/78751642165
U2 - 10.1186/1471-2148-11-23
DO - 10.1186/1471-2148-11-23
M3 - Article
C2 - 21261979
AN - SCOPUS:78751642165
SN - 1471-2148
VL - 11
JO - BMC Evolutionary Biology
JF - BMC Evolutionary Biology
IS - 1
M1 - 23
ER -