Abstract

Fox genes encode transcription factors that contain a DNA binding domain, the forkhead domain, and are known from diverse animal species. The exact homology of the Fox genes of different species is debated and this makes inferences about the evolution of the Fox genes, and their duplications and losses difficult. We have performed phylogenetic analyses of the Fox gene complements of 32 panarthropod species. Our results confirm an ancestral complement of FoxA, FoxB, FoxC, FoxD, FoxF, FoxG, FoxJ1, FoxJ2/3, FoxK, FoxL1, FoxL2, FoxN1/4, FoxN2/3, FoxO, FoxP, and FoxQ2 in the Arthropoda, and additionally FoxH and FoxQ1 in the Panarthropoda (including tardigrades and onychophorans). We identify a novel Fox gene sub-family, that we designate as FoxT that includes two genes in Drosophila melanogaster, Circadianly Regulated Gene (Crg-1) and forkhead domain 3F (fd3F). In a very recent paper, the same new Fox gene sub-family was identified in insects (Lin et al. 2021). Our analysis confirms the presence of FoxT and shows that its members are present throughout Panarthropoda. We show that the hitherto unclassified gene CG32006 from the fly Drosophila melanogaster belongs to FoxJ1. We also detect gene losses: FoxE and FoxM were lost already in the panarthropod ancestor, whereas the loss of FoxH occurred in the arthropod ancestor. Finally, we find an ortholog of FoxQ1 in the bark scorpion Centruroides sculpturatus, confirmed not only by phylogenetic analysis, but also by forming an evolutionarily conserved gene cluster with FoxF, FoxC, and FoxL1. This suggests that FoxQ1 belongs to the ancestral Fox gene complement in panarthropods and also in chelicerates, but has been lost at the base of the mandibulate arthropods.

Highlights

  • It could be shown that this 110 amino acid forkhead domain is widely conserved among different taxa (Kaufmann and Knöchel 1996) and that genes containing this domain are widespread throughout the animal kingdom

  • The number of Fox genes identified in the genome/ transcriptome sequences varied between 10 genes and a maximum of 50 genes

  • A few species have a smaller complement of Fox genes

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Summary

Introduction

Phenotypic diversity of all organisms is achieved through changes in developmental genetic programs. These processes are governed by genetic networks, which usually have transcription factors at the nodes of these networks. The first forkhead domain gene to be identified was fork head itself in the fly Drosophila melanogaster (Weigel et al 1989), followed shortly by one of its homologs in the rat (Lai et al 1990). Both genes were found to code for a similar helix-turn-helix motif DNA binding domain, which was termed winged-helix (Li and Tucker 1993).

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