Transgenic animal studies on the evolution of genetic regulatory circuitries
- 1 April 1992
- Vol. 14 (4) , 237-244
- https://doi.org/10.1002/bies.950140407
Abstract
The ability to transfer genes from one species to another provides a powerful method to study genetic regulatory differences between species in a homogeneous genetic background. A survey of several transgenic animal experiments indicates that the vast majority of regulatory differences observed between species are due to differences in the cis‐acting elements associated with the genes under study. A corollary is that in almost all cases the host species provides the necessary regulatory proteins for expression of the transgenes in specific tissues in which the endogenous homolog is not expressed. Although the details of the cis‐acting differences are unknown for most cases, it appears that these differences may consist of the acquisition or loss of unique elements or subtle variation of conserved elements. It is unknown whether much of this variation is directly related to adaptive evolution. The identification of the promoter enhancer elements responsible for these differences is an important first step in examining the functional significance of this variation.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Organ-specific patterns of gene expression in the reproductive tract of Drosophila are regulated by the sex-determination genesDevelopmental Biology, 1991
- Using Embryonic Stem Cells to Introduce Mutations into the Mouse Germ Line1Biology of Reproduction, 1991
- Ecdysteroid regulation of glucose dehydrogenase and alcohol dehydrogenase gene expression in Drosophila melanogasterDevelopmental Biology, 1989
- Evolution of Developmental RegulationThe American Naturalist, 1989
- Tissue-Specific Regulation of Human α1-Antitrypsin Gene Expression in Transgenic MiceDNA, 1989
- Drosophila Adh: A promoter element expands the tissue specificity of an enhancerCell, 1988
- Combinatorial control of structural genes in Drosophila: Solutions that work for the animalBioEssays, 1987
- Evolution of the differential regulation of duplicate genes after polyploidizationJournal of Molecular Evolution, 1979
- Complex cis‐acting regulatory genes demonstrated in Drosophila hybridsDevelopmental Genetics, 1979
- Gene Regulation for Higher Cells: A TheoryScience, 1969