15 - Evo-devo Flashcards
What is evo-devo?
How development mechanisms evolved
What are the two different kinds of regulatory elements?
- cis-acting -> elelments (enhancers/ silencers and promoter) proximal to the gene
- Trans-acting -> elements (TFs) encoded by distal regions, activators or repressors
Explain the action of cis and trans elements when all TFs are the same
- TFs may work independently - the higher the number of TFs, the more likely a cis-factor is to be occupied by them - expression may be triggered at a lower TF concentration as only a few need to be bound
- TF binding may be cooperative - individual TFs may have a low affinity - stabilising interactions between TFs may increase binding - at low TF conc, low binding, at a specific concentration cooperative binding will come in, generates and S-curve
Explain the action of cis and trans elements when there are different TFs
- different cis-elements might bind different TFs
- different inputs may regulate the cells in which a gene is transcribed
- also may regulate the level at which it is transcribed
What is often the output of ligands binding to receptors?
- change in gene expression due to activation of TFs
Explain the anterior-posterior axis development in fruit flies
- maternal effect genes - gradients from anterior to posterior - genotype of the mother patterns here
- Segmentation genes (gap genes) - defined broad regions
- pair-rule genes - defines 7 segments
- segment-polarity genes - defines 14 segments
- Homeotic genes - determines regional characteristics
What is the effect of a mutation in the maternal effect genes?
- major disturbances in anteroposterior organisation
What is the effect of a mutation in the segmentations genes (gap genes)?
- adjacent segments missing in major region of the body
What is the effect of a mutation in the pair-rule genes?
- part of pattern deleted in every other segment
What is the effect of a mutation in the segment-polarity genes?
- segments replaces by their mirror images
What is the effect of a mutation in the homeotic genes?
- inappropriate structures forms for a given segmentation level
Explain the role of the bicoid TF in development
- diffuses from anterior to posterior
- binds to enhancers of target gap genes
- individual nuclei share the same cytoplasm
- each gap gene has a different arrangement of cis elements for bicoid
- low affinity, only active at high concentrations
- if using cooperative binding, activates at low concentrations
Give an example of a gap gene
hunch back gene
Give an example of a pair rule gene
even-skipped
Explain the function of the pair-rule and segment polarity genes
- different cis-elements
- each stripe is activated by a specific combination and concentration of inputs