Elsevier

Developmental Biology

Volume 247, Issue 2, 15 July 2002, Pages 367-389
Developmental Biology

Regular Article
Zebrafish Hox Paralogue Group 2 Genes Function Redundantly as Selector Genes to Pattern the Second Pharyngeal Arch

https://doi.org/10.1006/dbio.2002.0701Get rights and content
Under an Elsevier user license
open archive

Abstract

The pharyngeal arches are one of the defining features of the vertebrates, with the first arch forming the mandibles of the jaw and the second forming jaw support structures. The cartilaginous elements of each arch are formed from separate migratory neural crest cell streams, which derive from the dorsal aspect of the neural tube. The second and more posterior crest streams are characterized by specific Hox gene expression. The zebrafish has a larger overall number of Hox genes than the tetrapod vertebrates, as the result of a duplication event in its lineage. However, in both zebrafish and mouse, there are just two members of Hox paralogue group 2 (PG2): Hoxa2 and Hoxb2. Here, we show that morpholino-mediated “knock-down” of both zebrafish Hox PG2 genes results in major defects in second pharyngeal arch cartilages, involving replacement of ventral elements with a mirror-image duplication of first arch structures, and accompanying changes to pharyngeal musculature. In the mouse, null mutants of Hoxa2 have revealed that this single Hox gene is required for normal second arch patterning. By contrast, loss-of-function of either zebrafish Hox PG2 gene individually has no phenotypic consequence, showing that these two genes function redundantly to confer proper pattern to the second pharyngeal arch. We have also used hoxb1a mis-expression to induce localized ectopic expression of zebrafish Hox PG2 genes in the first arch; using this strategy, we find that ectopic expression of either Hox PG2 gene can confer second arch identity onto first arch structures, suggesting that the zebrafish Hox PG2 genes act as “selector genes.”

Keywords

zebrafish
Hox
hindbrain
pharyngeal arches
morpholino
knock-down
selector genes
redundancy
Meckel's cartilage

Cited by (0)

1

To whom correspondence should be addressed. Fax: (773) 702-0037. E-mail: [email protected].