Document type

Article

Version

Published version

Publication date

Publication license

cc-by (c) Somorjai, Ildikó M. L. et al., 2018
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2445/133151

Wnt evolution and function shuffling in liberal and conservative chordate genomes

Journal Title

Director/Tutor

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Abstract

Background What impact gene loss has on the evolution of developmental processes, and how function shuffling has affected retained genes driving essential biological processes, remain open questions in the fields of genome evolution and EvoDevo. To investigate these problems, we have analyzed the evolution of the Wnt ligand repertoire in the chordate phylum as a case study. Results We conduct an exhaustive survey of Wnt genes in genomic databases, identifying 156 Wnt genes in 13 non-vertebrate chordates. This represents the most complete Wnt gene catalog of the chordate subphyla and has allowed us to resolve previous ambiguities about the orthology of many Wnt genes, including the identification of WntA for the first time in chordates. Moreover, we create the first complete expression atlas for the Wnt family during amphioxus development, providing a useful resource to investigate the evolution of Wnt expression throughout the radiation of chordates. Conclusions Our data underscore extraordinary genomic stasis in cephalochordates, which contrasts with the liberal and dynamic evolutionary patterns of gene loss and duplication in urochordate genomes. Our analysis has allowed us to infer ancestral Wnt functions shared among all chordates, several cases of function shuffling among Wnt paralogs, as well as unique expression domains for Wnt genes that likely reflect functional innovations in each chordate lineage. Finally, we propose a potential relationship between the evolution of WntA and the evolution of the mouth in chordates.

Subject (English)

Citation

Citation

SOMORJAI, Ildikó M. L., et al. Wnt evolution and function shuffling in liberal and conservative chordate genomes. Genome Biology. 2018. Vol. 19, num. 98. ISSN 1474-7596. [consulted: 14 of June of 2026]. Available at: https://hdl.handle.net/2445/133151

Export metadata

JSON - METS

Share record