Lack of developmental redundancy between Unc45 proteins in zebrafish muscle development.

Since the majority of protein-coding genes in vertebrates have intra-genomic homologues, it has been difficult to eliminate the potential of functional redundancy from analyses of mutant phenotypes, whether produced by genetic lesion or transient knockdown. Further complicating these analyses, not a...

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Main Authors: Sophie A Comyn, David Pilgrim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3492250?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-3a2069017eee451d99d6350a83d7135e2020-11-24T21:50:21ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-01711e4886110.1371/journal.pone.0048861Lack of developmental redundancy between Unc45 proteins in zebrafish muscle development.Sophie A ComynDavid PilgrimSince the majority of protein-coding genes in vertebrates have intra-genomic homologues, it has been difficult to eliminate the potential of functional redundancy from analyses of mutant phenotypes, whether produced by genetic lesion or transient knockdown. Further complicating these analyses, not all gene products have activities that can be assayed in vitro, where the efficiency of the various family members can be compared against constant substrates. Two vertebrate UNC-45 homologues, unc45a and unc45b, affect distinct stages of muscle differentiation when knocked down in cell culture and are functionally redundant in vitro. UNC-45 proteins are members of the UCS (UNC-45/CRO1/She4p) protein family that has been shown to regulate myosin-dependent functions from fungi to vertebrates through direct interaction with the myosin motor domain. To test whether the same functional relationship exists between these unc45 paralogs in vivo, we examined the developmental phenotypes of doubly homozygous unc45b(-/-); unc45a(-/-) mutant zebrafish embryos. We focused specifically on the combined effects on morphology and gene expression resulting from the zygotic lack of both paralogs. We found that unc45b(-/-) and unc45b(-/-); unc45a(-/-) embryos were phenotypically indistinguishable with both mutants displaying identical cardiac, skeletal muscle, and jaw defects. We also found no evidence to support a role for zygotic Unc45a function in myoblast differentiation. In contrast to previous in vitro work, this rules out a model of functional redundancy between Unc45a and Unc45b in vivo. Instead, our phylogenetic and phenotypic analyses provide evidence for the role of functional divergence in the evolution of the UCS protein family.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3492250?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sophie A Comyn
David Pilgrim
spellingShingle Sophie A Comyn
David Pilgrim
Lack of developmental redundancy between Unc45 proteins in zebrafish muscle development.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Sophie A Comyn
David Pilgrim
author_sort Sophie A Comyn
title Lack of developmental redundancy between Unc45 proteins in zebrafish muscle development.
title_short Lack of developmental redundancy between Unc45 proteins in zebrafish muscle development.
title_full Lack of developmental redundancy between Unc45 proteins in zebrafish muscle development.
title_fullStr Lack of developmental redundancy between Unc45 proteins in zebrafish muscle development.
title_full_unstemmed Lack of developmental redundancy between Unc45 proteins in zebrafish muscle development.
title_sort lack of developmental redundancy between unc45 proteins in zebrafish muscle development.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Since the majority of protein-coding genes in vertebrates have intra-genomic homologues, it has been difficult to eliminate the potential of functional redundancy from analyses of mutant phenotypes, whether produced by genetic lesion or transient knockdown. Further complicating these analyses, not all gene products have activities that can be assayed in vitro, where the efficiency of the various family members can be compared against constant substrates. Two vertebrate UNC-45 homologues, unc45a and unc45b, affect distinct stages of muscle differentiation when knocked down in cell culture and are functionally redundant in vitro. UNC-45 proteins are members of the UCS (UNC-45/CRO1/She4p) protein family that has been shown to regulate myosin-dependent functions from fungi to vertebrates through direct interaction with the myosin motor domain. To test whether the same functional relationship exists between these unc45 paralogs in vivo, we examined the developmental phenotypes of doubly homozygous unc45b(-/-); unc45a(-/-) mutant zebrafish embryos. We focused specifically on the combined effects on morphology and gene expression resulting from the zygotic lack of both paralogs. We found that unc45b(-/-) and unc45b(-/-); unc45a(-/-) embryos were phenotypically indistinguishable with both mutants displaying identical cardiac, skeletal muscle, and jaw defects. We also found no evidence to support a role for zygotic Unc45a function in myoblast differentiation. In contrast to previous in vitro work, this rules out a model of functional redundancy between Unc45a and Unc45b in vivo. Instead, our phylogenetic and phenotypic analyses provide evidence for the role of functional divergence in the evolution of the UCS protein family.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3492250?pdf=render
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