L13: Hox Genes
Hoxc-8 gene
KO mice for this gene have a homeotic transformation from lumbar rib to thoracic rib
Hoxa-3 gene
KO mice for this gene have reduced thyroid/cervical development, but does not qualify as a homeotic transformation
homeobox
a 180 nt sequence of DNA, a common motif to all homC genes and found across life
Hox10 paralogs
a triple knockout mouse has ribs growing from all lumbar and sacral vertebrae, so function is to repress rib development
Hox code hypothesis
every body region expresses a specific subset of the hox genes, which establishes the identity of the body region.
Spatial colinearity
expressed in the same order in space/along the embryo as on the chromosome
Temporal colinearity
expressed in the same timeline sequence as on the chromosome
colinearity principle
gene order on the chromosome correlates with order in the body plan. Very rare, seen in HomC genes of drosophila
homeotic gene
gene that codes for a specific body structure and can produce a homeotic transformation
Homologous genes
general, genes that are similar in sequence and may have a common ancestor
Genetic redundancy
keeping several copies of an important gene in the genome, slightly divergent functions but same general job. Ex: the hox paralogs.
Hox gene
mammalian homeobox genes, very parallel to drosophila homC genes. Found in four clusters a-d, with up to 13 genes per cluster(duplication and loss over evolutionary time). Shows spatial and temporal colinearity
homeotic transformation
one body structure is replaced by another. Ex: antennapedia and ultrabithorax mutants
homeodomain
the 60 AA translated from a homeobox DNA sequence. The part of the TF that contacts DNA
Hom-C complex
the group of original homeotic genes in drosophila, on chromosome 3. Comprised of antennapedia complex and bithorax complex.
Paralogous gene
two genes that are duplicates within the species. Ex: HoxA1, HoxB1, Hoxd1.