|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Oct4 Is a Key Regulator of Vertebrate Trunk Length Diversity.

First Author  Aires R Year  2016
Journal  Dev Cell Volume  38
Issue  3 Pages  262-74
PubMed ID  27453501 Mgi Jnum  J:236309
Mgi Id  MGI:5805721 Doi  10.1016/j.devcel.2016.06.021
Citation  Aires R, et al. (2016) Oct4 Is a Key Regulator of Vertebrate Trunk Length Diversity. Dev Cell 38(3):262-74
abstractText  Vertebrates exhibit a remarkably broad variation in trunk and tail lengths. However, the evolutionary and developmental origins of this diversity remain largely unknown. Posterior Hox genes were proposed to be major players in trunk length diversification in vertebrates, but functional studies have so far failed to support this view. Here we identify the pluripotency factor Oct4 as a key regulator of trunk length in vertebrate embryos. Maintaining high Oct4 levels in axial progenitors throughout development was sufficient to extend trunk length in mouse embryos. Oct4 also shifted posterior Hox gene-expression boundaries in the extended trunks, thus providing a link between activation of these genes and the transition to tail development. Furthermore, we show that the exceptionally long trunks of snakes are likely to result from heterochronic changes in Oct4 activity during body axis extension, which may have derived from differential genomic rearrangements at the Oct4 locus during vertebrate evolution.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

22 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

106 Expression

Trail: Publication