Evolutionarily assembled cis-regulatory module at a human ciliopathy locus |
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Authors: | Lee Jeong Ho Silhavy Jennifer L Lee Ji Eun Al-Gazali Lihadh Thomas Sophie Davis Erica E Bielas Stephanie L Hill Kiley J Iannicelli Miriam Brancati Francesco Gabriel Stacey B Russ Carsten Logan Clare V Sharif Saghira Malik Bennett Christopher P Abe Masumi Hildebrandt Friedhelm Diplas Bill H Attié-Bitach Tania Katsanis Nicholas Rajab Anna Koul Roshan Sztriha Laszlo Waters Elizabeth R Ferro-Novick Susan Woods C Geoffrey Johnson Colin A Valente Enza Maria Zaki Maha S Gleeson Joseph G |
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Affiliation: | Neurogenetics Laboratory, Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI), Department of Neurosciences, University of California, San Diego, CA, USA. |
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Abstract: | Neighboring genes are often coordinately expressed within cis-regulatory modules, but evidence that nonparalogous genes share functions in mammals is lacking. Here, we report that mutation of either TMEM138 or TMEM216 causes a phenotypically indistinguishable human ciliopathy, Joubert syndrome. Despite a lack of sequence homology, the genes are aligned in a head-to-tail configuration and joined by chromosomal rearrangement at the amphibian-to-reptile evolutionary transition. Expression of the two genes is mediated by a conserved regulatory element in the noncoding intergenic region. Coordinated expression is important for their interdependent cellular role in vesicular transport to primary cilia. Hence, during vertebrate evolution of genes involved in ciliogenesis, nonparalogous genes were arranged to a functional gene cluster with shared regulatory elements. |
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