Literature DB >> 26173445

Developmental control of transcriptional and proliferative potency during the evolutionary emergence of animals.

Cesar Arenas-Mena1, James A Coffman2.   

Abstract

It is proposed that the evolution of complex animals required repressive genetic mechanisms for controlling the transcriptional and proliferative potency of cells. Unicellular organisms are transcriptionally potent, able to express their full genetic complement as the need arises through their life cycle, whereas differentiated cells of multicellular organisms can only express a fraction of their genomic potential. Likewise, whereas cell proliferation in unicellular organisms is primarily limited by nutrient availability, cell proliferation in multicellular organisms is developmentally regulated. Repressive genetic controls limiting the potency of cells at the end of ontogeny would have stabilized the gene expression states of differentiated cells and prevented disruptive proliferation, allowing the emergence of diverse cell types and functional shapes. We propose that distal cis-regulatory elements represent the primary innovations that set the stage for the evolution of developmental gene regulatory networks and the repressive control of key multipotency and cell-cycle control genes. The testable prediction of this model is that the genomes of extant animals, unlike those of our unicellular relatives, encode gene regulatory circuits dedicated to the developmental control of transcriptional and proliferative potency.
© 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cambrian; Cyclin D; H2A.Z; chromatin evolution; gene regulatory networks; multipotency; transdifferentiation

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26173445      PMCID: PMC4705838          DOI: 10.1002/dvdy.24305

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Dev Dyn        ISSN: 1058-8388            Impact factor:   3.780


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