Organization of the Hox gene cluster in the grasshopper, Schistocerca gregaria

  1. David E. K. Ferrier* and
  2. Michael Akam
  1. Wellcome/Cancer Research Campaign Institute and Department of Genetics, Tennis Court Road, Cambridge, CB2 1QR, United Kingdom

Abstract

The conserved organization of the Hox genes throughout the animal kingdom has become one of the major paradigms of evolutionary developmental biology. We have examined the organization of the Hox genes of the grasshopper, Schistocerca gregaria. We find that the grasshopper Hox cluster is over 700 kb long, and is not split into equivalents of the Antennapedia complex and the bithorax complex of Drosophila melanogaster. SgDax and probably also Sgzen, the grasshopper homologues of fushi-tarazu (ftz) and Zerknüllt (zen), respectively, are also in the cluster, showing that the non-homeotic Antp-class genes, “accessory genes,” are an ancient feature of insect Hox clusters.

Footnotes

  • * e-mail: dekf1{at}mole.bio.cam.ac.uk.

  • e-mail: akam{at}mole.bio.cam.ac.uk.

  • Frank H. Ruddle, Yale University, New Haven, CT

  • Abbreviations: ANT-C, Antennapedia complex; BX-C, bithorax complex; PFGE, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis.

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