Duplication and maintenance of the Myb genes of vertebrate animals

Summary Gene duplication is an important means of generating new genes. The major mechanisms by which duplicated genes are preserved in the face of purifying selection are thought to be neofunctionalization, subfunctionalization, and increased gene dosage. However, very few duplicated gene families...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Colin J. Davidson, Erin E. Guthrie, Joseph S. Lipsick
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Company of Biologists 2012-11-01
Series:Biology Open
Subjects:
Myb
Online Access:http://bio.biologists.org/content/2/2/101
id doaj-57dd789c08d44a9db245e712c957171d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-57dd789c08d44a9db245e712c957171d2021-06-02T18:29:35ZengThe Company of BiologistsBiology Open2046-63902012-11-012210111010.1242/bio.2012315220123152Duplication and maintenance of the Myb genes of vertebrate animalsColin J. DavidsonErin E. GuthrieJoseph S. LipsickSummary Gene duplication is an important means of generating new genes. The major mechanisms by which duplicated genes are preserved in the face of purifying selection are thought to be neofunctionalization, subfunctionalization, and increased gene dosage. However, very few duplicated gene families in vertebrate species have been analyzed by functional tests in vivo. We have therefore examined the three vertebrate Myb genes (c-Myb, A-Myb, and B-Myb) by cytogenetic map analysis, by sequence analysis, and by ectopic expression in Drosophila. We provide evidence that the vertebrate Myb genes arose by two rounds of regional genomic duplication. We found that ubiquitous expression of c-Myb and A-Myb, but not of B-Myb or Drosophila Myb, was lethal in Drosophila. Expression of any of these genes during early larval eye development was well tolerated. However, expression of c-Myb and A-Myb, but not of B-Myb or Drosophila Myb, during late larval eye development caused drastic alterations in adult eye morphology. Mosaic analysis implied that this eye phenotype was cell-autonomous. Interestingly, some of the eye phenotypes caused by the retroviral v-Myb oncogene and the normal c-Myb proto-oncogene from which v-Myb arose were quite distinct. Finally, we found that post-translational modifications of c-Myb by the GSK-3 protein kinase and by the Ubc9 SUMO-conjugating enzyme that normally occur in vertebrate cells can modify the eye phenotype caused by c-Myb in Drosophila. These results support a model in which the three Myb genes of vertebrates arose by two sequential duplications. The first duplication was followed by a subfunctionalization of gene expression, then neofunctionalization of protein function to yield a c/A-Myb progenitor. The duplication of this progenitor was followed by subfunctionalization of gene expression to give rise to tissue-specific c-Myb and A-Myb genes.http://bio.biologists.org/content/2/2/101Gene duplicationNeofunctionalizationSubfunctionalizationEvolutionMyb
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Colin J. Davidson
Erin E. Guthrie
Joseph S. Lipsick
spellingShingle Colin J. Davidson
Erin E. Guthrie
Joseph S. Lipsick
Duplication and maintenance of the Myb genes of vertebrate animals
Biology Open
Gene duplication
Neofunctionalization
Subfunctionalization
Evolution
Myb
author_facet Colin J. Davidson
Erin E. Guthrie
Joseph S. Lipsick
author_sort Colin J. Davidson
title Duplication and maintenance of the Myb genes of vertebrate animals
title_short Duplication and maintenance of the Myb genes of vertebrate animals
title_full Duplication and maintenance of the Myb genes of vertebrate animals
title_fullStr Duplication and maintenance of the Myb genes of vertebrate animals
title_full_unstemmed Duplication and maintenance of the Myb genes of vertebrate animals
title_sort duplication and maintenance of the myb genes of vertebrate animals
publisher The Company of Biologists
series Biology Open
issn 2046-6390
publishDate 2012-11-01
description Summary Gene duplication is an important means of generating new genes. The major mechanisms by which duplicated genes are preserved in the face of purifying selection are thought to be neofunctionalization, subfunctionalization, and increased gene dosage. However, very few duplicated gene families in vertebrate species have been analyzed by functional tests in vivo. We have therefore examined the three vertebrate Myb genes (c-Myb, A-Myb, and B-Myb) by cytogenetic map analysis, by sequence analysis, and by ectopic expression in Drosophila. We provide evidence that the vertebrate Myb genes arose by two rounds of regional genomic duplication. We found that ubiquitous expression of c-Myb and A-Myb, but not of B-Myb or Drosophila Myb, was lethal in Drosophila. Expression of any of these genes during early larval eye development was well tolerated. However, expression of c-Myb and A-Myb, but not of B-Myb or Drosophila Myb, during late larval eye development caused drastic alterations in adult eye morphology. Mosaic analysis implied that this eye phenotype was cell-autonomous. Interestingly, some of the eye phenotypes caused by the retroviral v-Myb oncogene and the normal c-Myb proto-oncogene from which v-Myb arose were quite distinct. Finally, we found that post-translational modifications of c-Myb by the GSK-3 protein kinase and by the Ubc9 SUMO-conjugating enzyme that normally occur in vertebrate cells can modify the eye phenotype caused by c-Myb in Drosophila. These results support a model in which the three Myb genes of vertebrates arose by two sequential duplications. The first duplication was followed by a subfunctionalization of gene expression, then neofunctionalization of protein function to yield a c/A-Myb progenitor. The duplication of this progenitor was followed by subfunctionalization of gene expression to give rise to tissue-specific c-Myb and A-Myb genes.
topic Gene duplication
Neofunctionalization
Subfunctionalization
Evolution
Myb
url http://bio.biologists.org/content/2/2/101
work_keys_str_mv AT colinjdavidson duplicationandmaintenanceofthemybgenesofvertebrateanimals
AT erineguthrie duplicationandmaintenanceofthemybgenesofvertebrateanimals
AT josephslipsick duplicationandmaintenanceofthemybgenesofvertebrateanimals
_version_ 1721402170760232960