eLife (Feb 2021)

Developmental hourglass and heterochronic shifts in fin and limb development

  • Koh Onimaru,
  • Kaori Tatsumi,
  • Chiharu Tanegashima,
  • Mitsutaka Kadota,
  • Osamu Nishimura,
  • Shigehiro Kuraku

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.62865
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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How genetic changes are linked to morphological novelties and developmental constraints remains elusive. Here, we investigate genetic apparatuses that distinguish fish fins from tetrapod limbs by analyzing transcriptomes and open-chromatin regions (OCRs). Specifically, we compared mouse forelimb buds with the pectoral fin buds of an elasmobranch, the brown-banded bamboo shark (Chiloscyllium punctatum). A transcriptomic comparison with an accurate orthology map revealed both a mass heterochrony and hourglass-shaped conservation of gene expression between fins and limbs. Furthermore, open-chromatin analysis suggested that access to conserved regulatory sequences is transiently increased during mid-stage limb development. During this stage, stage-specific and tissue-specific OCRs were also enriched. Together, early and late stages of fin/limb development are more permissive to mutations than middle stages, which may have contributed to major morphological changes during the fin-to-limb evolution. We hypothesize that the middle stages are constrained by regulatory complexity that results from dynamic and tissue-specific transcriptional controls.

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