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Publication : A regulatory archipelago controls Hox genes transcription in digits.

First Author  Montavon T Year  2011
Journal  Cell Volume  147
Issue  5 Pages  1132-45
PubMed ID  22118467 Mgi Jnum  J:178930
Mgi Id  MGI:5300643 Doi  10.1016/j.cell.2011.10.023
Citation  Montavon T, et al. (2011) A regulatory archipelago controls hox genes transcription in digits. Cell 147(5):1132-45
abstractText  The evolution of digits was an essential step in the success of tetrapods. Among the key players, Hoxd genes are coordinately regulated in developing digits, where they help organize growth and patterns. We identified the distal regulatory sites associated with these genes by probing the three-dimensional architecture of this regulatory unit in developing limbs. This approach, combined with in vivo deletions of distinct regulatory regions, revealed that the active part of the gene cluster contacts several enhancer-like sequences. These elements are dispersed throughout the nearby gene desert, and each contributes either quantitatively or qualitatively to Hox gene transcription in presumptive digits. We propose that this genetic system, which we call a "regulatory archipelago," provides an inherent flexibility that may partly underlie the diversity in number and morphology of digits across tetrapods, as well as their resilience to drastic variations. PAPERFLICK:
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