A taxon-restricted duplicate ofIroquois3is required for patterning the spider waist

Author:

Setton Emily V. W.ORCID,Ballesteros Jesús A.,Blaszczyk Pola O.,Klementz Benjamin C.ORCID,Sharma Prashant P.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractThe chelicerate body plan is distinguished from other arthropod groups by its division of segments into two tagmata: the anterior prosoma (“cephalothorax”) and the posterior opisthosoma (“abdomen”). Little is understood about the genetic mechanisms that establish the prosomal-opisthosomal (PO) boundary. To discover these mechanisms, we created high-quality genomic resources for the large-bodied spiderAphonopelma hentzi. We sequenced specific territories along the antero-posterior axis of developing embryos and applied differential gene expression analyses to identify putative regulators of regional identity. After bioinformatic screening for candidate genes that were consistently highly expressed in the posterior segments, we validated the function of highly ranked candidates in the tractable spider modelParasteatoda tepidariorum. Here, we show that an arthropod homolog of the Iroquois complex of homeobox genes is required for proper formation of the boundary between arachnid tagmata. The function of this homolog had not been previously characterized, because it was lost in the common ancestor of Pancrustacea, precluding its investigation in well-studied insect model organisms. Knockdown of the spider copy of this gene, which we designate aswaist-less, inP. tepidariorumresulted in embryos with defects in the PO boundary, incurring discontinuous spider germ bands. We show thatwaist-lessis required for proper specification of dorso-ventral identity in the segments that span the prosoma-opisthosoma boundary, which in adult spiders corresponds to the narrowed pedicel. Our results suggest the requirement of an ancient, taxon-restricted paralog for the establishment of the tagmatic boundary that defines Chelicerata.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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