Abstract
AbstractDisentangling the evolution of the molecular processes and genetic networks that facilitate the emergence of morphological novelties is one of the main objectives in evolutionary developmental biology. Here, we investigated the evolutionary history of a gene regulatory network controlling the development of novel tooth-like feeding-structures in diplogastrid nematodes. Focusing on NHR-1 and NHR-40, the two transcription factors that regulate the morphogenesis of these feeding structures inPristionchus pacificus, we sought to determine whether they have a similar function in out-group nematodeCaenorhabditis elegans, which has typical “rhabditid” flaps instead of teeth. Contrary to our initial expectations, we found that they do not have a similar function. While both receptors are co-expressed in the tissues that produce the feeding structures in the two nematodes, genetic inactivation of either receptor had no impact on feeding-structure morphogenesis inC. elegans. Transcriptomic experiments revealed that NHR-1 and NHR-40 have highly species-specific regulatory targets. These results suggest two possible evolutionary scenarios: either the genetic module responsible for feeding-structure morphogenesis in Diplogastridae already existed in the last common ancestor ofC. elegansandP. pacificus, and subsequently disintegrated in the former as NHR-1 and NHR-40 acquired new targets, or it evolved in conjunction with teeth in Diplogastridae. These findings indicate that feeding-structure morphogenesis is regulated by different genetic programs inP. pacificusandC. elegans, hinting at developmental systems drift during the flap-to-tooth transformation. Further research in other “rhabditid” species is needed to fully reconstruct the developmental genetic changes which facilitated the evolution of novel feeding structures in Diplogastridae.Research HighlightsCombining CRISPR-based mutagenesis, geometric morphometrics, and transcriptomics, we found that the genetic module governing the morphogenesis of novel feeding structures in diplogastrid nematodes is not conserved in the “rhabditid”C. elegans.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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