Cell Reports (Apr 2020)

Gene Regulatory and Expression Differences between Mouse and Pig Limb Buds Provide Insights into the Evolutionary Emergence of Artiodactyl Traits

  • Virginie Tissières,
  • Florian Geier,
  • Barbara Kessler,
  • Eckhard Wolf,
  • Rolf Zeller,
  • Javier Lopez-Rios

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 31, no. 1

Abstract

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Summary: Digit loss/reductions are evolutionary adaptations in cursorial mammals such as pigs. To gain mechanistic insight into these processes, we performed a comparative molecular analysis of limb development in mouse and pig embryos, which revealed a loss of anterior-posterior polarity during distal progression of pig limb bud development. These alterations in pig limb buds are paralleled by changes in the mesenchymal response to Sonic hedgehog (SHH) signaling, which is altered upstream of the reduction and loss of Fgf8 expression in the ectoderm that overlaps the reduced and vestigial digit rudiments of the pig handplate, respectively. Furthermore, genome-wide open chromatin profiling using equivalent developmental stages of mouse and pig limb buds reveals the functional divergence of about one-third of the regulatory genome. This study uncovers widespread alterations in the regulatory landscapes of genes essential for limb development that likely contributed to the morphological diversion of artiodactyl limbs from the pentadactyl archetype of tetrapods. : Tissières et al. show that, in comparison to the pentadactyl mouse limb, the expression and regulation of key developmental pathways are altered during pig limb bud development. These changes likely contributed to the morphological evolution of the highly specialized pig limb skeleton, with two weight-bearing and two reduced digits. Keywords: morphological evolution, limb development, cis-regulation, SHH signaling, artiodactyl, pig, mouse, ATAC-seq