| Literature DB >> 18772437 |
Shyam Prabhakar1, Axel Visel, Jennifer A Akiyama, Malak Shoukry, Keith D Lewis, Amy Holt, Ingrid Plajzer-Frick, Harris Morrison, David R Fitzpatrick, Veena Afzal, Len A Pennacchio, Edward M Rubin, James P Noonan.
Abstract
Changes in gene regulation are thought to have contributed to the evolution of human development. However, in vivo evidence for uniquely human developmental regulatory function has remained elusive. In transgenic mice, a conserved noncoding sequence (HACNS1) that evolved extremely rapidly in humans acted as an enhancer of gene expression that has gained a strong limb expression domain relative to the orthologous elements from chimpanzee and rhesus macaque. This gain of function was consistent across two developmental stages in the mouse and included the presumptive anterior wrist and proximal thumb. In vivo analyses with synthetic enhancers, in which human-specific substitutions were introduced into the chimpanzee enhancer sequence or reverted in the human enhancer to the ancestral state, indicated that 13 substitutions clustered in an 81-base pair module otherwise highly constrained among terrestrial vertebrates were sufficient to confer the human-specific limb expression domain.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18772437 PMCID: PMC2658639 DOI: 10.1126/science.1159974
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728