Author:
Ahi Ehsan Pashay,Richter Florian,Sefc Kristina M.
Abstract
AbstractComparing gene regulatory patterns between seemingly similar phenotypic traits can provide important insights on the molecular mechanisms underlying the evolution of those traits. In this study, we investigate the molecular basis of the formation of a spade-shaped caudal fin, which is a rare phenotype among teleost fish characterized by an elongated medial region of the fin. We examined the expression patterns of candidate fin-shape genes in the spade-shaped caudal fin of the related species Lamprologus tigripictilis, an East African cichlid in the tribe Lamprologini. The candidate gene set consisted of a previously identified gene regulatory network (GRN) associated with the elongation of fin regions in another Lamprologini cichlid species and further genes selected on the basis of co-expression data and transcription factor prediction. Unexpectedly, the anatomical features of elongated fin rays differed and gene expression patterns associated with fin elongation were only weakly conserved between the two related species. We report 20 genes and transcription factors (including angptl5, cd63, csrp1a, cx43, esco2, gbf1 and rbpj), whose expression levels differed between the elongated and the short caudal fin regions of L. tigripictilis, and which are therefore candidates for the regulation of the spade-like fin shape.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory