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Salamander Hox clusters contain repetitive DNA and expanded non-coding regions: a typical Hoxstructure for non-mammalian tetrapod vertebrates?

Abstract

Hox genes encode transcription factors that regulate embryonic and post-embryonic developmental processes. The expression of Hox genes is regulated in part by the tight, spatial arrangement of conserved coding and non-coding sequences. The potential for evolutionary changes in Hox cluster structure is thought to be low among vertebrates; however, recent studies of a few non-mammalian taxa suggest greater variation than originally thought. Using next generation sequencing of large genomic fragments (>100 kb) from the red spotted newt (Notophthalamus viridescens), we found that the arrangement of Hox cluster genes was conserved relative to orthologous regions from other vertebrates, but the length of introns and intergenic regions varied. In particular, the distance between hoxd13 and hoxd11 is longer in newt than orthologous regions from vertebrate species with expanded Hox clusters and is predicted to exceed the length of the entire HoxD clusters (hoxd13hoxd4) of humans, mice, and frogs. Many repetitive DNA sequences were identified for newt Hox clusters, including an enrichment of DNA transposon-like sequences relative to non-coding genomic fragments. Our results suggest that Hox cluster expansion and transposon accumulation are common features of non-mammalian tetrapod vertebrates.

Background

Bilaterian body plans are determined in part by DNA transcription factors called Hox genes [14]. Excepting fish, vertebrate Hox genes are ordered among four unlinked clusters that each span relatively short segments of genomic DNA (generally 100–200 Kb). The arrangement of Hox genes on chromosomes is co-linear with their pattern of transcription along the anterior-posterior and proximal-distal body axes during embryonic development [5, 6]. The organization and structure of Hox gene clusters and associated non-coding regulatory elements are mostly conserved across vertebrates [7, 8]. However, as genomic studies extend to non-genetic model organisms, variations in Hox cluster structure are being discovered, including variations in gene number, repetitive sequence content, cluster length, and non-coding sequence conservation [915]. These variations suggest that the evolution of Hox cluster structure may correlate with phylogeny, unique modes of vertebrate development, and/or derived morphological characteristics.

In tetrapod vertebrates, stereotypic patterns of Hox expression are observed along the proximal-distal axes of developing limbs [16]. In most species, Hox developmental genetic programs are only expressed during limb development. However, salamanders reactivate Hox gene expression throughout life to correctly pattern tissues within regenerating limbs [1721]. While some patterns of Hox expression in regenerating limbs recapitulate the expression pattern in developing limbs, spatial and temporal differences are observed [1821]. This raises the possibility that salamander Hox clusters may contain non-coding elements that uniquely regulate post-embryonic, tissue regeneration; such elements may not be expected within Hox clusters of vertebrates incapable of limb regeneration. There is another reason to suspect that salamander Hox clusters may differ from other vertebrate taxa—salamanders as a group have extremely large genomes. An average sized salamander genome is approximately 10× larger than the Homo sapiens genome; some salamanders have genomes that are 30× larger [22]. This larger genome size is reflected in the structure of genes, as salamander introns are longer on average than orthologous introns in other vertebrates [23, 24].

Belleville et al. [25] reported that two pairs of adjacent Hox cluster genes from the red spotted newt (Notophthalamus viridescens) presented highly conserved coding and non-coding sequences relative to orthologous mammalian Hox sequences. These results suggested that Hox cluster evolution is constrained even within the context of a very large vertebrate genome (>20 pg/haploid nucleus) [22]. However, the results that we present below show that newt Hox clusters are more variable than originally thought. Sequencing of large genomic fragments (>100 Kb) reveals regional variation in length across newt Hox cluster regions and higher proportions of DNA transposon-like sequences within Hox introns and intergenic sequences than non-coding genomic regions. Our results show that expanded non-coding regions and relatively high repetitive DNA sequence content are typical of Hox clusters in amphibians and other non-mammalian tetrapod vertebrates.

Results and discussion

BAC library screening, sequencing, assembly, and annotation

A bacterial artificial clone (BAC) library of 41,472 clones was constructed for newt, and pools were screened by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to identify clones that contained Hox genes. Two BACs containing HoxC (NV_H3_75P19; [GenBank:JF490017.1]) and HoxD (NV_H3_85F1; [GenBank:JF490018.1]) orthologs and two additional BACs containing only non-coding genomic DNA (NV_H3_28J3; [GenBank:JF490019.1] and NV_H3_32L5; [GenBank:JF490020.1]) were purified and sequenced to an average depth of 220 bp sequence reads per nucleotide position. The reads for NV_H3_75P19 were assembled into three large contigs with the breaks occurring between hoxc5 and hoxc4, and a position 3 of hoxc4. The reads for NV_H3_28J3 were re-assembled into two large contigs with the break occurring 5 of hoxd11. The reads for the BACs that contained non-coding genomic DNA generated more than three contigs and could not be ordered; these were randomly concatenated for analyses described below. BLASTx searches revealed that the BACs containing Hox sequences contained some, but not all of Hox gene members from each cluster: NV_H3_75P19 contained hoxc11, hoxc10, hoxc9, hoxc8, hoxc6, hoxc5, and hoxc4, and NV_H3_85F1 contained hoxd11, hoxd10, hoxd9, and hoxd8. The order of newt Hox genes was conserved relative to orthologs in other vertebrate genomes, as were coding and non-coding sequences, and exon/intron boundaries (Figures 1 and 2). High sequence identity was observed for Hox genes, which is typical of transcription factors that function in highly conserved developmental pathways. Conserved non-coding sequences (CNS) were identified from regions flanking Hox exons; these likely correspond to enhancer elements and non-coding RNAs that function in the regulation of Hox gene expression. For example, two CNSs that were identified downstream of newt hoxd11 (40 kb) correspond to enhancer elements VIII and IX from Gerard et al. [26], and a CNS upstream (3 kb) of newt hoxc8 corresponds to an enhancer from Shashikant et al. [27]. Also, a CNS identified downstream of hoxc10 (28 kb) corresponds to human miRNA-196a, and a canonical miR-196a seed-pairing site is predicted 268 bp from the end of newt hoxd8[28]. Thus, elements that are known to regulate Hox gene functions in other vertebrate species show identity to sequences in newt Hox genomic regions.

Figure 1
figure 1

Multispecies alignment of orthologous HoxC genomic regions among selected vertebrate species. The black bars at the top of the figure show the positions of exons in the mouse sequence, which was used as the reference sequence for alignment. Red bars indicate strongly aligned regions—at least 100 bp in length without a gap and >70% nucleotide identity. Green bars indicate all other aligned regions. Zfish, zebrafish.

Figure 2
figure 2

Multispecies alignment of orthologous HoxD genomic regions among selected vertebrate species. The black bars at the top of the figure show the positions of exons in the mouse sequence, which was used as the reference sequence for alignment. Red bars indicate strongly aligned regions—at least 100 bp in length without a gap and >70% nucleotide identity. Green bars indicate all other aligned regions. Zfish, zebrafish.

While the general organization of newt Hox genes was conserved relative to other vertebrates, extensive variation was observed in the lengths of intergenic and intronic sequences (Table 1; Figures 3 and Figure 4). The length of the newt hoxc11-c4 region was longer than orthologous mammalian (H. sapiens, Mus musculous) and zebrafish (Danio rerio) regions, but shorter than regions from Anolis carolinensis (lizard) and Xenopus tropicalis (frog), which are known to have expanded HoxC clusters [13]. While newt HoxC introns were also longer than mammalian and fish introns, frog and lizard introns also exceed the length of their mammalian counterparts. This supports the idea that salamander genes typically contain long introns [23, 24], although we did not observe the same pattern for HoxD genes. While long lizard and frog HoxD introns were observed, newt hoxd119 introns were typically shorter than orthologous mammalian introns. Thus, while non-mammalian tetrapod vertebrates, and especially the anolis lizard, have Hox genes with long introns, relative intron length varies among paralogous members of newt HoxD and HoxC clusters.

Table 1 Species comparison of HoxC and HoxD intron lengths
Figure 3
figure 3

Structure and repetitive sequence content of newt HoxC , and total length of orthologous hoxc11–c4 . (A) The structure and repetitive sequence content of newt HoxC. Green bars indicate the positions of exons, gray bars indicate the positions of RepBase repeats, and black bars indicate the positions of unique newt repetitive sequences. (B) The total length of orthologous hoxc11c4 non-coding segments from representative vertebrates.

Figure 4
figure 4

Structure and repetitive sequence content of newt HoxD and total length of orthologous hoxd11–d8. (A) The structure and repetitive sequence content of newt HoxD. Green bars indicate the positions of exons, gray bars indicate the positions of RepBase repeats, and black bars indicate the positions of unique newt repetitive sequences. (B) The total length of orthologous hoxd11d8 non-coding segments from representative vertebrates.

In annotating HoxD cluster genes, we discovered that hoxd11 was located approximately 73 kb from the terminus of NV_H385F1. This distance, which provides a minimum estimate to the expected position of hoxd13 (hoxd12 is not known for amphibians [15, 26]), predicts the newt hoxd1311 segment to be > 4.5× and 1.5× longer than orthologous HoxD regions from frog and lizard. It also exceeds the length of hoxd1113 segments in the coelacanth and a caecilian amphibian (Typhlonectes natans) [29], which until this study was thought to be longest among vertebrates (Figure 4). While it is possible that the expanded region is explained by an evolutionary loss of the newt hoxd13 gene, this seems unlikely because hoxd13 orthologs are known for related salamanders [15], and we did not detect the presence of a pseudogene nucleotide signature. Because expanded Hox clusters have been shown for a representative caecilian [26] and anuran species [13], parsimony suggests the expansion of the hoxd1113 region to be a shared derived characteristic of amphibians, with convergent expansion of the same region in lizard.

Interspersed repeat sequences in BACs

Previous studies have shown that interspersed repetitive DNA sequences are rarely observed within Hox clusters of mammals and some reptiles, but are more abundant in species with expanded Hox clusters [15, 26]. To test this idea, we searched Hox and non-Hox genomic clones for repeats that are catalogued in RepBase (Genetic Information Research Institute, Mountain View, USA) [30], and also aligned genomic sequences using MultiPipmaker [31] to identify direct and indirect repeats unique to the newt. In many cases, we found that both approaches identified repetitive sequences for the same segments of DNA; however, more newt specific repeats were identified overall (Additional file 1: Table S1). The annotated (i.e., RepBase) interspersed repetitive sequence content of HoxC and HoxD genomic sequences was approximately two to three times lower than the content of the two, non-protein coding genomic clones (Table 2). Considering annotated and newt-specific repeats, 77% of the non-coding genomic sequence was identified as repetitive, compared to 24% and 32% for HoxC and HoxD sequences (Additional file 1: Table S1). These results suggest that the fixation probability for repetitive element accumulation is lower for Hox clusters, presumably because these regions are evolutionarily constrained by the functional sequences they encode. Repeats were more frequent in regions flanking genes, with the large intergenic regions flanking terminal Hox loci showing the greatest accumulation (Figures 3 and 4). Repeats were predicted for introns, and a higher density of DNA transposon-like sequences were predicted within HoxC and HoxD clusters than within non-coding genomic clones. Interestingly, the enrichment of DNA transposon-like sequences was about 20-fold for HoxC but only 2-fold for HoxD (Table 2). While this may reflect sampling bias, the more expanded of the two newt Hox clusters does not contain a higher proportion of DNA transposon-like sequences; instead, HoxD contains a moderately higher proportion of long interspersed retroelement-like sequences, simple repeats, and newt-specific repeats. Observation of a higher frequency of DNA transposon-like sequences, within arguably a more functionally constrained HoxC cluster, suggests an insertion bias for Hox genic regions. While this speculation awaits further study, our results support the idea that repetitive sequences, and in particular DNA transposon-like sequences, are more abundant within Hox clusters of non-mammalian tetrapod vertebrates [13] than is indicated by analysis of mammalian Hox clusters.

Table 2 Percent coverage of salamander genomic sequences by newt-specific and RepBase repetitive elements

Conclusions

Salamander Hox genomic regions show elements of conservation and diversity in comparison to other vertebrate species. Whereas the structure and organization of Hox coding genes is conserved, newt Hox clusters show variation in the lengths of introns and intergenic regions, and the hoxd1311 region exceeds the lengths of orthologous segments even among vertebrate species with expanded Hox clusters. We posit that the hoxd1311 expansion predated a basal salamander genome size increase that occurred approximately 180 million years ago [32] as it is preserved in all three extant amphibian groups. Over more recent timescales, additional evidence supports the idea that Hox clusters are amenable to structural evolution: there is variation in the lengths of introns and intergenic regions, relatively high numbers of repetitive sequences, and non-random accumulations of DNA transposons in newts and lizards. The non-random accumulation of DNA-like transposons could potentially alter developmental programming by creating sequence motifs for transcriptional regulation [3335]. Overall, available data from several non-mammalian tetrapods suggest that Hox structural flexibility is the rule, not the exception. We speculate that such flexibility may contribute to developmental variation across non-mammalian taxa, both in embryogenesis and during the re-deployment of Hox genes during post-embryonic developmental processes, such as metamorphosis and regeneration.

Methods

BAC library construction, screening, and sequencing

The Clemson University Genomics Institute constructed a BAC library from partially restriction digested and size-selected genomic DNA that was isolated from the erythrocytes of a single Notophthalamus viridescens female (University of Dayton Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee Protocol # 011–12). A total of 41,472 clones were arrayed in 108 × 384 well plates. Superpools of clones were made by combining clones from twelve 384 well plates into a single pool. DNA was extracted from 400 ml of overnight cultures of superpools using the Plasmid MaxiPrep kit (Qiagen, Valencia, CA, USA), and the DNA pellet was re-suspended in 250 μl of water. PCR primers for newt hoxc10 (forward: CAAAGAGAAAACGCGGAAAG; reverse: CGATACCGTCCCTTCCATAA) and hoxd10 (forward: TTTCCATTGTCGGTTTTTCC; reverse: TCCTACCACGGACATTACCC) were used to identify two Hox gene-containing BACs and two BACs that did not contain protein-coding sequence. The four clones were grown in 400 ml L-broth, and DNA was isolated using the Qiagen Large Construction Kit (Qiagen); genomic DNA contamination was reduced using Plasmid–Safe DNAse treatment (Epicentre Biotechnologies, Madison, USA). The Roche GS FLX Titanium platform (Basel, Switzerland) was used to sequence BACs; the work was accomplished by the staff of the University of Iowa Sequencing Core Facility. The termini of BAC inserts were end-sequenced using Sanger technology and ABI Big-Dye 3.1 (Invitrogen, Grand Island, USA).

DNA sequence assembly and annotation

Sequences were screened to trim vector, adapters, and contaminating Escherichia coli sequences. After an initial assembly using GS De Novo Assembler (454 Life Sciences, Branford, USA), contigs and singletons were assembled further using DNASTAR SeqMan (DNASTAR, Inc., Madison, USA). Contiguous sequences of assembled BACs were searched (blastn) against salamander expressed sequence tagged contigs at Sal-Site [36]; non-redundant nucleotide and protein databases at NCBI (blastx and tblastp) [37] were used to identify and annotate gene regions. For multispecies comparisons, genomic sequences for H. sapiens (GRCh37.10), and M. musculus (GRCh38.1), were obtained from NCBI. Anolis carolinesis (AnoCar 2.0) and D. rerio (Zv9) were obtained from Ensembl [38]. X. tropicalis (build 7.1) was obtained from Xenbase [39]. Sequences were aligned using MultiPipMaker [28]. Annotated repeats were identified by searching re-assembled BAC clones against all deposited repeats in RepBase [30]. Newt-specific repeats were identified using MultiPipmaker [28] by aligning re-assembled BAC clones against each other and by performing self-self BAC alignments. The “search both strands” and “high sensitivity” options were used in MultiPipmaker to identify significantly similar non-coding sequences that are located to different positions either within or between BACs. The terminal base pair positions for these alignments were recorded to denote the positions of repetitive sequences within BACs. If the two repeats occurred within 50 bp of each other, they were compiled as a single repetitive sequence with the most terminal base positions denoting the repeat span. The base pair coordinates for newt-specific repetitive sequences were combined with base pair coordinates for RepBase repetitive sequences to generate an underlay file (Additional file 1: Table S1), and this was used to create maps of repetitive elements for the HoxD and HoxC genomic regions.

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Acknowledgments

The research was supported by grant R24-OD010435 (SRV) and EY-10540 (PAT) from the National Center for Research Resources (NCRR), a component of the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The project also used resources developed under Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative grant (W911NF-09-1-0305) from the Army Research Office (SRV) and resources from the Ambystoma Genetic Stock Center, which is funded by grant DBI-0951484 from the National Science Foundation (SRV). The contents of this paper are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of NCRR, NIH, ARO, or NSF.

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Correspondence to Stephen Randal Voss.

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The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Authors’ contributions

SRV, JJS, NM, and PAT conceived and designed the experiment, and analyzed and interpreted the results. SP assembled sequence reads corresponding to BACs and analyzed and annotated the sequence data. JAW performed PCR, isolated BACs for sequencing, and analyzed and annotated the sequence data. SRV drafted the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

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40246_2013_34_MOESM1_ESM.xlsx

Additional file 1: Table S1: Base pair coordinates for RepBase and newt-specific repeats identified from BAC clones with HoxC and HoxD genomic regions. (XLSX 48 KB)

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Voss, S.R., Putta, S., Walker, J.A. et al. Salamander Hox clusters contain repetitive DNA and expanded non-coding regions: a typical Hoxstructure for non-mammalian tetrapod vertebrates?. Hum Genomics 7, 9 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1186/1479-7364-7-9

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