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"PRINCIPLES OF PHYLOGENETICS: ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION" Integrative Biology 200B Spring 2011 !Evolution and development ("evo-devo") The last frontier in our understanding of biological forms is an understanding of their developmental origins. Much of the ultimate control of form resides in the genome, yet much also resides in the environment (at levels from the internal cellular environment to the external habitat). The highly interactive and complex nature of developmental processes make it impractical to deduce phenotype from genotype based on first principles. We need to carefully keep in mind what we mean by "homology" as well. The phenotype is an emergent property and its origin can be studied most efficiently by backtracking from the phenotype itself to its structural, physiological, developmental, ecological, and genetic causes. Ontogeny and phylogeny revisited The relation between ontogeny and phylogeny has been of longstanding interest to biologists, and continues to be a timely topic. It is important of course to take a comparative approach to development, within a phylogenetic framework. Our aims are to reconstruct both the developmental pathway taken by a given species for a given structure, and the manner in which the developmental system evolved. Some terminology (see Humphries 1988 for details):http://www.usm.maine.edu/bio/courses/bio205/Lab_3.html Heterotopy -- evolutionary change in the position of development Heterochrony -- evolutionary change in the timing of development (see figure later) Peramorphosis (Hypermorphosis vs. Acceleration vs. Predisplacement) Paedomorphosis (Progenesis vs. Neoteny vs. Postdisplacement) Differences between plants and animals in development Differences in plant development, as compared to animals: Modular growth, at several hierarchical levels Growth from an apical meristem (or single apical cell) Cells don't move (rigid cell wall) Plants do not have a segregated germ line Ontogeny and genetics 1) Expression studies -- use of reporter genes -- EST studies (cDNAs from target tissues) 2) Forward genetics -- starts with a phenotype and moves towards the gene -- screen for & isolate relevant mutants -- map locus through genetic crosses -- isolate gene & sequence 3) Reverse genetics -- Starts with a particular gene and assays the effect of its disruption -- Knockouts of candidate genes by transformation, observe change in phenotypes 4) Gene family evolution A. Hox genes in animalsHox genes are a subset of homeobox genes. Might have arisen by rounds of duplication of an ancestral gene, followed by a quaduplication of the cluster in mammals. Partially overlapping zones of expression which vary in the anterior extent of their expression define distinct regions. Tandem gene duplication can allow retention of gene while new functions are adopted by one copy. Hox gene cluster arose from rounds of tandem duplication. Vertebrates have four Hoxgene complexes. Amphioxus, a vertebrate-like chordate, has one Hox cluster which may be close to ancestral Hox complex. (taken from http://www.mun.ca/biology/ desmid/brian/ BIOL3530/DB_Ch15/BIOL2900_EvoDevo.html). Source: Samadi & Steiner (2009) Dev genes Evol. 22):161. B. The ABC model in flowering plants The MADS box is a highly conserved sequence motif found in a family of transcription factors. By now, more than hundred MADS box sequences have been found in species from all eukaryotic kingdoms. The family of MADS domain proteins has been subdivided into several distinct subfamilies. Most MADS domain factors play important roles in developmental processes. Most prominently, the MADS box genes in flowering plants are the "molecular architects" of flower morphogenesis (source: The MADS-box Gene Home Page; http://www.mpizkoeln.mpg.de/mads/).MADS-box genes and the ABC model of organ identity determination The basic structure of a complete flower consists of four concentric whorls. A simple model has been proposed to predict organ formation in flowers, where three classes of homeotic genes, the so-called ABC-class genes, act alone or together to give rise to sepals (A), petals (A+B), stamens (B+C), and carpels (C). According to the ABC-model, organ determination in the whorls depends on the combinatorial action of three regulatory functions. A mutation disrupting one of the functions causes a homeotic change in organ identity. Note that the A and C functions are negatively regulating each other: Mutation in one causes expansion in the expression domain of the other. Molecular cloning has indicated that most of these ABC homeotic genes encode a well conserved DNA binding domain, the MADS box, and that this domain has been shown to be capable of binding to specific DNA sequence motifs known as CArG boxes. Because of their essential roles in flower development, and due to the high degree of conservation in the MADS box domain, MADS box genes have been cloned from diverse angiosperm plant species, including petunia, tomato, maize, white campion, sorrel, gerbera, and even one gymnosperm species, spruce. Although the ABC model has been shown to apply in several species other than the model species Arabidopsis and Antirhhinum, the precise functions of most MADS box genes remain unclear. It seems that, in addition to their essential roles during floral development, MADS box genes act also as regulators for various other aspects of plant development. Source Gerbera Lab, Univ Helsinki http://honeybee.helsinki.fi/MMSBL/Gerberalab/abc.html Differences between animals in development Spiral & radial cleavage – mosaic and regulative development Source: http://www.callutheran.edu/BioDev/courses/biol21/slides/show1/sld009.htmBreaking bilateral symmetry - Nodal family By enlarge the evolutionary history of multicellular organisms on Earth has featured bilateral symmetry. The fossil record suggests that this general body plan has predominated in metazoan taxa since the Cambrian explosion. However, recent studies of gene regulatory systems have identified regulatory genes that produce asymmetry in several phyla. Thus there are options to bilateral symmetry, they just appear to have a limited roles in the history of life. Because of the preponderance of bilateral symmetry body plans in Metazoa, asymmetries are often foci of special study. From a developmental perspective asymmetries were of special interest because unlike other morphological conditions, symmetry was


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Berkeley INTEGBI 200B - Evolution and development

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