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Genesis and evolution of the Evx and Moxgenes and the extended Hox and ParaHox gene clusters

Abstract

Background

Hox and ParaHox gene clusters are thought to have resulted from the duplication of a ProtoHox gene cluster early in metazoan evolution. However, the origin and evolution of the other genes belonging to the extended Hox group of homeobox-containing genes, that is, Mox and Evx, remains obscure. We constructed phylogenetic trees with mouse, amphioxus and Drosophila extended Hox and other related Antennapedia-type homeobox gene sequences and analyzed the linkage data available for such genes.

Results

We claim that neither Mox nor Evx is a Hox or ParaHox gene. We propose a scenario that reconciles phylogeny with linkage data, in which an Evx/Mox ancestor gene linked to a ProtoHox cluster was involved in a segmental tandem duplication event that generated an array of all Hox-like genes, referred to as the 'coupled' cluster. A chromosomal breakage within this cluster explains the current composition of the extended Hox cluster (with Evx, Hox and Mox genes) and the ParaHox cluster.

Conclusions

Most studies dealing with the origin and evolution of Hox and ParaHox clusters have not included the Hox-related genes Mox and Evx. Our phylogenetic analyses and the available linkage data in mammalian genomes support an evolutionary scenario in which an ancestor of Evx and Mox was linked to the ProtoHox cluster, and that a tandem duplication of a large genomic region early in metazoan evolution generated the Hox and ParaHox clusters, plus the cluster-neighbors Evx and Mox. The large 'coupled' Hox-like cluster EvxHox/MoxParaHox was subsequently broken, thus grouping the Mox and Evx genes to the Hox clusters, and isolating the ParaHox cluster.

Background

Homeobox genes have crucial roles during embryogenesis and have been deeply studied from the point of view of the evolution of development. Changes in their number and regulation may have been instrumental in body-plan evolution and diversification [1]. Whether the physical linkage of many homeobox genes is maintained by regulatory constraints or is simply a reflection of their evolutionary origin by tandem gene duplication has not yet been fully elucidated. The clustering of the Antennapedia superclass of homeobox genes in contemporary genomes is proposed to be the outcome of tandem gene duplication and cluster duplications from an ancestral UrArcheHox gene during metazoan evolution [2,3]. However, genome rearrangements, clade-specific duplications and gene losses obscure the complete evolutionary chronicle.

The analysis of the human genome led Pollard and Holland to suggest that four such clusters, namely the extended Hox, the ParaHox, the NKL and the EHGbox clusters, arose by successive tandem gene duplications and cluster duplications from an ancestral UrArcheHox gene early in metazoan evolution [3]. The extended Hox array includes the Hox cluster genes plus the former orphan classes Evx and Mox. The evolutionary sister of the Hox cluster, the ParaHox cluster, is believed to have resulted from the non-tandem duplication of a four-gene ProtoHox cluster that gave rise to the primordial Hox and ParaHox clusters [4]. Hence, Hox and ParaHox genes have the same evolutionary age. Although extensive studies have been performed to trace the origin and evolution of the Hox genes [5,6,7] and more recently the ParaHox plus Hox genes [4,8,9], Evx and Mox have rarely been considered in these analyses. They have been unified into the extended Hox group, owing to their linked disposition in the genome of certain organisms; for example, Evx genes are closely linked to the 5' end of the Hox gene cluster in most vertebrates and in a cnidarian species [10,11,12]. Likewise, Mox genes map near the opposite extreme of the HoxA and HoxB clusters in the human genome. These linkage data prompted Pollard and Holland to propose that Evx and Mox genes originated during the tandem duplication events that produced the ancestral Hox cluster genes [3]. In a phylogenetic tree, Hox genes alone do not form a monophyletic clade, but a clade containing both Hox and ParaHox genes. Evx genes fall basal to the Hox/ParaHox clade [8,13,14], while the Mox gene has vaguely been referred to as a ParaHox gene and suggested to represent the missing ParaHox gene related to the central group (PG4 to PG8) of Hox genes. [14]. Unfortunately, most studies on Hox/ParaHox relationships do not include the Mox class [2,8,9]. Nonetheless, the two views of the evolutionary relationship between the Mox and the Hox and ParaHox genes (Hox-related or ParaHox-related) are contradictory. If Mox genes are derived from the tandem duplication of a particular Hox gene (and thus linked to the Hox gene cluster), they are not ParaHox genes. If Mox is a descendant of the missing central ParaHox gene, it is not a Hox gene, although it is linked to the Hox cluster. Following the same reasoning, if Evx is the sister of Hox plus ParaHox genes, it cannot have originated from the tandem duplication of a Hox gene.

All these discordant points of view led us to construct phylogenetic trees and search for data backing up the proposed evolutionary relationships between the extended Hox group (including Evx and Mox) and ParaHox genes. We discuss outlines that may not have been considered yet, and draw an evolutionary scenario, which attests that both Evx and Mox were generated in the same duplication event that gave rise to the Hox and ParaHox clusters.

Results and discussion

Mox and Evxare neither Hox nor ParaHox genes

Phylogenetic trees constructed with the homeodomain and the homeodomain plus flanking residues showed similar topologies. Figure 1 shows a neighbor-joining (NJ) unrooted tree with the homeodomain plus flanking residues of amphioxus, mouse and Drosophila sequences. Maximum parsimony (MP) trees showed the same relationships (data not shown). The resulting quartet puzzling (QP) tree was a comb-like tree without any clear internal relationship. QP is based on a maximum likelihood analysis of quartets and is believed to be too conservative. Furthermore, none of the clades below 50% support is retrieved at the final tree, which may be due to the few amino-acid positions of the data, the current lack of any reliable amino-acid model for the evolution of homeodomain-containing proteins and the stringency of the QP method. The trees obtained had three outstanding features (Figure 1). First is the consistent grouping of the already proposed relationship for the Hox and ParaHox genes: that is, Cdx is the posterior ParaHox gene more closely related to the posterior group of Hox genes; Xlox/Pdx1 is the ParaHox gene more closely related to group 3 of Hox genes; and Gsx is the ParaHox gene more closely related to the anterior group of Hox genes. Second is the lack of a ParaHox central gene, as only Hox genes are grouped within the central group. The third feature is the grouping of Mox and Evx class genes. The bootstrap value that supports this relationship is 60%, higher than values reported elsewhere for Hox/ParaHox relationships [4,8,14]. Two major conclusions can be drawn from the analyses: Mox is not the central ParaHox gene, and not only Evx but also Mox genes are equally related to both Hox and ParaHox genes, suggesting an early origin for both classes.

Figure 1
figure 1

Unrooted neighbor-joining phylogenetic tree. The tree relates the amino-acid sequences of the homeodomain plus 10 flanking residues on both sides in the Hox, ParaHox, Evx and Mox protein sequences from mouse, amphioxus and Drosophila. The numbers refer to bootstrap values. Major groupings are indicated by color codes. Note that Mox and Evx group together in a monophyletic group.

To investigate these relationships further, we constructed various phylogenetic trees to which we added the sequences of other closely related Antennapedia-type homeobox genes, which have been shown to be linked to the extended Hox cluster in certain mammalian genomes [3], that is, the Dlx and the Msx classes of NKL homeobox genes and the Engrailed, the Gbx and HB-9 classes of EHGbox homeobox genes. As before, similar topologies were obtained when trees were constructed with the homeodomain or with the homeodomain plus 10 flanking residues each side, and by NJ or MP analyses. Figure 2 shows an unrooted NJ tree (Figure 2a) or the same tree rooted with selected EHG class genes (En) as outgroup sequences (Figure 2b). Again, none of the trees revealed a close relationship between Mox and the central Hox genes. Besides, the resulting trees groups together Evx and Mox classes, in a basal position with respect to the monophyletic Hox and ParaHox group.

Figure 2
figure 2

Phylogenetic trees. (a) Unrooted neighbor-joining tree; (b) rooted trees. The trees' topology suggests that Evx and Mox group together as a sister group of the Hox/ParaHox clade. See text for discussion.

Scenarios for the origin and evolution of the extended Hox and ParaHox clusters

Kourakis and Martindale [8] have pointed out that if a sister of the UrProtoHox gene (which gave rise to the ProtoHox cluster by tandem duplication) was linked to it, the association of Evx with the Hox cluster in certain phyla might be the remnant of such linkage. If this is so, a ParaHox Evx-type gene is expected to be adjacent to and 5' of the Cdx gene, provided the Hox/ParaHox split involved genes adjacent to the ProtoHox cluster. This is supported by the presence of genes for tyrosine kinase receptors and collagens, among others, in the vicinity of both Hox and ParaHox clusters ([15] and Figure 3). Our phylogenetic data attractively suggest that Mox may well be this gene. Furthermore, careful checking of the mouse and human genomes revealed that, with the exception of mouse Mox2, Mox and Evx genes are linked to the Hox clusters, but at either side of it: whereas Evx is tightly linked to the 5' end of the Hox cluster (under 50 kb), Mox is loosely linked to its 3' end (more than 5 Mb) (Figure 3).

Figure 3
figure 3

Synteny in the Hox/ParaHox regions in the human genome. The boxes represent the genes (only the 3'- and the 5'-most Hox genes have been depicted for clarity). Chromosomal positions are indicated below. Hox and ParaHox genes are depicted in purple, Mox in blue, Evx in green and non-homeobox genes such as those for collagens and tyrosine kinase receptors in light and dark gray, respectively.

Linkage data and phylogenetic trees allow us to envisage a feasible scenario for the extended Hox/ParaHox cluster origin and evolution (Figure 4). We propose that an ancestral precursor of Mox and Evx genes (here referred to as the Evx/Mox ancestor) was linked to the UrProtoHox gene (step 1). The ProtoHox cluster was then generated by tandem duplication of the UrProtoHox gene, thus forming, with the Evx/Mox ancestor gene, an ancestral Hox-like cluster (step 2). Tandem duplication of the whole cluster and adjacent regions gave rise to the 'coupled' Hox-like cluster (Evx plus primordial Hox cluster and Mox plus primordial ParaHox cluster, step 3). Thereafter, chromosomal breakage between Mox and the primordial ParaHox cluster caused the loose linkage of Mox at the anterior end of the Hox cluster (step 4). Finally, the further independent evolution of the primordial Hox and ParaHox clusters (expansion by internal tandem duplications in the former and loss of the central gene in the latter) accounts for the current composition of the extended Hox and the ParaHox arrays in chordates (step 5). Note that steps 4 and 5 are interchangeable, and that Hox cluster expansion and ParaHox reduction may have preceded chromosomal breakage.

Figure 4
figure 4

Evolutionary scenario proposed for the origin and evolution of the extended Hox and ParaHox gene clusters. It implies an Evx/Mox ancestor gene initially linked to the UrProtoHox gene (step 1) that gives rise after duplication to Evx and Mox genes, which is paralleled by the generation of primordial Hox and ParaHox clusters, forming a continuous array containing all the Hox-like genes (the 'coupled' Hox-like cluster; step 3). See text for details.

Alternative scenarios that include the non-tandem duplication of the ancestral Hox-like cluster would require further steps, including the jumping of Mox across clusters. An ancient duplication of the Evx/Mox ancestor gene, followed by inversion of Eux/ProtoHox plus a local (non-tandem) duplication restricted to the ProtoHox cluster, would account as well for the present situation. Although they cannot be formally discarded, these scenarios seem unlikely, as they demand more events of gene duplication and local rearrangements than the model proposed here. Furthermore, current linkage data for non-homeobox genes in the vicinity of the Hox and ParaHox clusters (see below) suggest that a larger region was implicated in these duplication events.

The evolutionary scenario proposed here stresses not only the ancient origin of both Mox and Evx classes but also the necessity of a tandem duplication event to originate the extended Hox and ParaHox clusters. Moreover, not only the ProtoHox cluster, but also neighboring regions (including the Evx/Mox ancestor gene), were tandemly duplicated.

Current linkage data strongly favor the proposed outline. It has been proposed that a segmental (non-tandem) duplication restricted to the ProtoHox cluster was involved in the genesis of the extended Hox and ParaHox gene clusters [3,4]. This seems unlikely, as in the neighborhood of the mammalian Hox and ParaHox clusters, there are members of other gene families (for example, tyrosine kinase receptors and collagens ([15] and Figure 3), implying that a larger syntenic region can be traced back to the time of ProtoHox cluster duplication.

This evolutionary scenario nicely squares linkage data on Hox and ParaHox syntenic regions with phylogenetic evidence. It involves regional tandem duplication and chromosomal breakage but no polyploidization events or gene losses at either side of the ParaHox cluster. Such breakage can be dated before the duplication of the Hox and ParaHox clusters at the origins of vertebrates [4,16], since Mox1 and Mox2 are linked to the HoxB and HoxA clusters in humans, respectively (Figure 3). However, current linkage data in protostomes do not allow us to trace such breakage further back or determine whether such breakage took place independently in specific lineages. The Drosophila Evx homolog, even-skipped, is not linked to the Hox cluster and the Mox homolog, buttonless, is not in the proximity of the Hox cluster nor close to the cad and ind ParaHox genes [17]. The fly genome is probably highly derived from the protostome ancestor, as is the Caenorhabditis elegans genome, which lacks two ParaHox genes and the Mox gene [18]. Unfortunately, no linkage data from other invertebrates are available. Moreover, cnidarians probably have Hox and ParaHox clusters derived from the primordial clusters (step 4 in Figure 4). Interestingly Evx is linked to Hox genes in anthozoans [9,12], but nothing is known about the chromosomal position of the cnidarian Mox homolog with respect to Hox or ParaHox genes [19]. Thus, the existence of cnidarian Mox and Evx genes, plus Hox and ParaHox, places the tandem duplication of the ancestral Hox-like cluster in early metazoan evolution, before cnidarian divergence.

Conclusions

Most studies dealing with the origin and evolution of Hox and ParaHox clusters have not included the Hox-related genes Mox and Evx. We have constructed phylogenetic trees with Hox, ParaHox, Mox and Evx genes and analyzed the available linkage data in mammalian genomes. We support an evolutionary scenario in which an ancestor of Evx and Mox was linked to the ProtoHox cluster, and that a tandem duplication of a large genomic region early in metazoan evolution generated the Hox and ParaHox clusters, plus the cluster-neighbors Evx and Mox. The large 'coupled' Hox-like cluster EuxHox/MoxParaHox was subsequently broken, thus grouping the Mox and Evx and the Hox clusters, and isolating the ParaHox cluster. Whether this breakage happened only once early in evolution, or multiple times in several places is unknown. It is tempting to speculate that a particular extant lineage retains an unbroken version of the 'coupled' cluster.

Materials and methods

Hox, ParaHox, Evx, Mox, Msx, Gbx and Dlx sequences were obtained from public databases [20]. Trees were constructed with mouse (when available), amphioxus and Drosophila sequences. Gene names and accession numbers are as follows: mouse Mox2 (mMox2, P32443); mouse Mox1 (mMox1, P32442); amphioxus Mox (AmphiMox, AAM09689); Drosophila buttonless (btn, AAF56025); mouse Evx1 (mEvx1, P23683); mouse Evx2 (mEvx2, P49749); amphioxus EvxA (AmphiEvxA, AAK58953); amphioxus EvxB (AmphiEvxB, AAK58954); Drosophila even-skipped (eve, P06602); mouse Gsh1 (mGsh1, P31315); mouse Gsh2 (mGsh2, P31316); amphioxus Gsx (AmphiGsx, AAC39015); Drosophila ind (ind, AAK77133); mouse Hoxa1 (mHoxa1, P09022); mouse Hoxa2 (mHoxa2, P31245); amphioxus Hox1 (AmphiHox1, BAA78620); amphioxus Hox2 (AmphiHox2, BAA78621); Drosophila labial (lab, P10105); Drosophila proboscipedia (pb, P31264); Drosophila zerknüllt (zen, AAF54087); mouse Pdx1 (mPdx1, P52946); amphioxus Xlox (AmphiXlox, AAC 39016); mouse Hoxa3 (mHoxa3, P02831); amphioxus Hox3 (AmphiHox3, CAA48180); mouse Hoxa4 (mHoxa4, P06798); mouse Hoxa5 (mHoxa5, P20719); mouse Hoxa6 (mHoxa6, P09092); mouse Hoxa7 (mHoxa7, P02830); mouse Hoxb8 (mHoxb8, P09078); amphioxus Hox4 (AmphiHox4, BAA78622); amphioxus Hox5 (AmphiHox4, BAA78622); amphioxus Hox6 (AmphiHox4, BAA78622); amphioxus Hox7 (AmphiHox4, BAA78622); amphioxus Hox8 (AmphiHox4, BAA78622); Drosophila Deformed (Dfd, P07548); Drosophila Sex combs reduced (Scr, P09077); Drosophila fushi tarazu (ftz, P02835), Drosophila Antennapedia (Antp; P02833); Drosophila Ultrabithorax (Ubx, P02834); Drosophila abdominal-A (AbdA, P29555); mouse Cdx1 (mCdx1, P18111); mouse Cdx2 (mCdx1, P43241); mouse Cdx4 (mCdx4, Q07424); amphioxus Cdx (AmphiCdx, AAC39017); Drosophila caudal (cad, P09085); mouse Hoxa9 (mHoxa9, P09631); mouse Hoxa10 (mHoxa10, P31310); mouse Hoxa11 (mHoxa11, P31311); mouse Hoxd12 (mHoxd12, P23812); mouse Hoxa13 (mHoxa13, Q62424); amphioxus Hox9 (AmphiHox9, S47607); amphioxus Hox10 (AmphiHox10, CAA84522); amphioxus Hox11 (AmphiHox11, AAF81909); amphioxus Hox12 (AmphiHox12, AAF81903); amphioxus Hox13 (AmphiHox13, AAF81904); amphioxus Hox14 (Amphi-Hox14, AAF81905); and Drosophila Abdominal-B (AbdB, P09087). Selected Antennapedia-type homeobox genes (because of their linkage disposition to the Hox gene cluster in certain genomes), that also were used are: amphioxus distal-less (AmphiDll, P53772); amphioxus Msx (AmphiMsx, CAA10201); amphioxus engrailed (AmphiEn, AAB40144); Drosophila msh (Dmmsh, CAA59680); Drosophila distal-less (DmDll, AAB24059); Drosophila engrailed (DmEn, P02836); Drosophila HB9 (DmHB9, NP648164); mouse Dlx1 (mDlx1, Q64317); mouse Dlx2 (mDlx2, P40764); mouse Dlx3 (mDlx3, Q64205); mouse Dlx4 (mDlx4, P70436); mouse Msx1 (mMsx1, P13297); mouse Msx2 (mMsx2, Q03358); mouse Msx3 (mMsx3, P70354); Oryzias latipes Msx4 (OlMsx4, BAA88311); human Gbx1 (hGbx1, Q14549) and mouse Gbx2 (mGbx2; P48031); mouse engrailed1 (mEn1, P09065); mouse engrailed2 (mEn2, P09066); mouse HB9 (mHB9, NP064328). Sequences from other organisms were omitted as the full set of genes is not available or the homeobox is not fully sequenced.

Trees were constructed using the homeodomain sequence alone or the homeodomain plus ten flanking residues on both sides. The phylogenetic methods used were maximum parsimony (MP), neighbor joining (NJ) and quartet puzzling (QP). First, an alignment was constructed using the ClustalX program [21] and was then edited by eye. NJ trees were inferred by either ClustalX or MEGA 2.0 [22] using a Poisson model for amino-acid evolution. Nodal support was assessed by 1,000 bootstrap replicates. MP trees were inferred using the MEGA 2.0 program, by applying the close-neighbor-interchange method with 1,000 bootstrap replicates. A QP tree was inferred by TREE-PUZZLE 5.0 [23], using the JTT model [24] with a Gamma distribution (eight categories inferred from the data) and 10,000 replicates.

Linkage information was obtained from the human and mouse genome working draft web page [25].

Additional data files

The alignments used to construct the trees in Figure 1 and Figure 2 are available (alignment for Figure 1 and alignment for Figure 2).

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Acknowledgements

We are indebted to Iñaki Ruiz, Gemma Marfany and Ricard Albalat for many discussions, Robin Rycroft and Ivana Miño for checking the English version of the manuscript, and Josep Gardenyes for help with figures. We are particularly indebted to two anonymous referees for extremely fruitful suggestions. This study was supported by grants PB98-1261-C02-02 and BMC2002-03316 (Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnología, Spain). and by the Departament d'Universitats, Recerca i Societat de la Informació de la Generalitat de Catalunya. C.M. held a CIRIT (Generalitat de Catalunya) predoctoral fellowship.

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Minguillón, C., Garcia-Fernàndez, J. Genesis and evolution of the Evx and Moxgenes and the extended Hox and ParaHox gene clusters. Genome Biol 4, R12 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1186/gb-2003-4-2-r12

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