A change in cis-regulatory logic underlying obligate versus facultative muscle multinucleation in chordates

Author:

Johnson Christopher J.1,Zhang Zheng23,Zhang Haifeng3,Shang Renjie23,Piekarz Katarzyna M.1,Bi Pengpeng23,Stolfi Alberto1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Biological Sciences, Georgia Institute of Technology 1 , Atlanta, GA 30332 , USA

2. University of Georgia 2 Department of Genetics , , Athens, GA 30602 , USA

3. Center for Molecular Medicine, University of Georgia 3 , Athens, GA 30602 , USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Vertebrates and tunicates are sister groups that share a common fusogenic factor, Myomaker (Mymk), that drives myoblast fusion and muscle multinucleation. Yet they are divergent in when and where they express Mymk. In vertebrates, all developing skeletal muscles express Mymk and are obligately multinucleated. In tunicates, Mymk is expressed only in post-metamorphic multinucleated muscles, but is absent from mononucleated larval muscles. In this study, we demonstrate that cis-regulatory sequence differences in the promoter region of Mymk underlie the different spatiotemporal patterns of its transcriptional activation in tunicates and vertebrates. Although in vertebrates myogenic regulatory factors (MRFs) such as MyoD1 alone are required and sufficient for Mymk transcription in all skeletal muscles, we show that transcription of Mymk in post-metamorphic muscles of the tunicate Ciona requires the combinatorial activity of MRF, MyoD and Early B-cell Factor (Ebf). This macroevolutionary difference appears to be encoded in cis, likely due to the presence of a putative Ebf-binding site adjacent to predicted MRF binding sites in the Ciona Mymk promoter. We further discuss how Mymk and myoblast fusion might have been regulated in the last common ancestor of tunicates and vertebrates, for which we propose two models.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

National Science Foundation

Georgia Institute of Technology

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

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