The formation of the thumb requires direct modulation of Gli3 transcription by Hoxa13

In the tetrapod limb, the digits (fingers or toes) are the elements most subject to morphological diversification in response to functional adaptations. However, despite their functional importance, the mechanisms controlling digit morphology remain poorly understood. Here we have focused on underst...

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Published inProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS Vol. 117; no. 2; pp. 1090 - 1096
Main Authors Bastida, Maria Félix, Pérez-Gómez, Rocío, Trofka, Anna, Zhu, Jianjian, Rada-Iglesias, Alvaro, Sheth, Rushikesh, Stadler, H. Scott, Mackem, Susan, Ros, Marian A.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States National Academy of Sciences 14.01.2020
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Summary:In the tetrapod limb, the digits (fingers or toes) are the elements most subject to morphological diversification in response to functional adaptations. However, despite their functional importance, the mechanisms controlling digit morphology remain poorly understood. Here we have focused on understanding the special morphology of the thumb (digit 1), the acquisition of which was an important adaptation of the human hand. To this end, we have studied the limbs of the Hoxa13 mouse mutant that specifically fail to form digit 1. We show that, consistent with the role of Hoxa13 in Hoxd transcriptional regulation, the expression of Hoxd13 in Hoxa13 mutant limbs does not extend into the presumptive digit 1 territory, which is therefore devoid of distal Hox transcripts, a circumstance that can explain its agenesis. The loss of Hoxd13 expression, exclusively in digit 1 territory, correlates with increased Gli3 repressor activity, a Hoxd negative regulator, resulting from increased Gli3 transcription that, in turn, is due to the release from the negative modulation exerted by Hox13 paralogs on Gli3 regulatory sequences. Our results indicate that Hoxa13 acts hierarchically to initiate the formation of digit 1 by reducing Gli3 transcription and by enabling expansion of the 5′Hoxd second expression phase, thereby establishing anterior–posterior asymmetry in the handplate. Our work uncovers a mutual antagonism between Gli3 and Hox13 paralogs that has important implications for Hox and Gli3 gene regulation in the context of development and evolution.
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1M.F.B. and R.P.-G. contributed equally to this work.
Author contributions: M.F.B., A.R.-I., R.S., S.M., and M.A.R. designed research; M.F.B., R.P.-G., A.T., J.Z., R.S., H.S.S., S.M., and M.A.R. performed research; H.S.S. and S.M. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; M.F.B., R.P.-G., A.T., J.Z., A.R.-I., R.S., H.S.S., S.M., and M.A.R. analyzed data; and M.A.R. wrote the paper.
2Present address: Department of Biomedicine, University of Basel Medical School, 4058 Basel, Switzerland.
Edited by Neil H. Shubin, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, and approved December 11, 2019 (received for review November 10, 2019)
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1919470117