4.5 Article

Terrestrial vertebrates have two keratin gene clusters; striking differences in teleost fish

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 84, Issue 6, Pages 623-635

Publisher

ELSEVIER GMBH, URBAN & FISCHER VERLAG
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejcb.2005.01.007

Keywords

amphibia; birds; fish; intermediate filaments; keratin gene clusters; lamin genes; mammals; teleosts; vertebrate genomes; zebrafish

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Keratins I and 11 form the largest subgroups of mammalian intermediate filament (IF) proteins and account as obligatory heteropolymers for the keratin filaments of epithelia. All human type I genes except for the K18 gene are clustered on chromosome 17q21, while all type 11 genes form a cluster on chromosome 12q13, that ends with the type I gene K18. Highly related keratin gene clusters are found in rat and mouse. Since fish seem to lack a keratin 11 cluster we screened the recently established draft genomes of a bird (chicken) and an amphibian (Xenopus). The results show that keratin I and 11 gene clusters are a feature of all terrestrial vertebrates. Because hair with its multiple hair keratins and inner root sheath keratins is a mammalian acquisition, the keratin gene clusters of chicken and Xenopus tropicalis have only about half the number of genes found in mammals. Within the type I clusters all genes have the same orientation. In type 11 clusters there is a rare gene of opposite orientation. Finally we show that the genes for keratins 8 and 18, which are the first expression pair in embryology, are not only adjacent in mammals, but also in Xenopus and three different fish. Thus neighboring K8 and K 18 genes seem a feature shared by all vertebrates. In contrast to the two well defined keratin gene clusters of terrestrial vertebrates, three teleost fish show an excess of type I over type 11 genes, the lack of a keratin type 11 gene cluster and a striking dispersal of type I genes, that are probably the result of the teleost-specific whole genome duplication followed by a massive gene loss. This raises the question whether keratin gene clusters extend beyond the ancestral bony vertebrate to cartilage fish and lamprey. We also analyzed the complement of non-keratin IF genes of the chicken. Surprisingly, an additional nuclear lamin gene, previously overlooked by cDNA cloning, is documented on chromosome 10. The two splice variants closely resemble the lamin LIII a + b of amphibia and fish. This lamin gene is lost on the mammalian lineage. (c) 2005 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.

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