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A multifunctional Wnt regulator underlies the evolution of rodent stripe patterns

journal contribution
posted on 2025-01-07, 00:08 authored by MR Johnson, S Li, CF Guerrero-Juarez, P Miller, BJ Brack, SA Mereby, JA Moreno, Charles FeiginCharles Feigin, J Gaska, JA Rivera-Perez, Q Nie, A Ploss, SY Shvartsman, R Mallarino
Animal pigment patterns are excellent models to elucidate mechanisms of biological organization. Although theoretical simulations, such as Turing reaction–diffusion systems, recapitulate many animal patterns, they are insufficient to account for those showing a high degree of spatial organization and reproducibility. Here, we study the coat of the African striped mouse (Rhabdomys pumilio) to uncover how periodic stripes form. Combining transcriptomics, mathematical modelling and mouse transgenics, we show that the Wnt modulator Sfrp2 regulates the distribution of hair follicles and establishes an embryonic prepattern that foreshadows pigment stripes. Moreover, by developing in vivo gene editing in striped mice, we find that Sfrp2 knockout is sufficient to alter the stripe pattern. Strikingly, mutants exhibited changes in pigmentation, revealing that Sfrp2 also regulates hair colour. Lastly, through evolutionary analyses, we find that striped mice have evolved lineage-specific changes in regulatory elements surrounding Sfrp2, many of which may be implicated in modulating the expression of this gene. Altogether, our results show that a single factor controls coat pattern formation by acting both as an orienting signalling mechanism and a modulator of pigmentation. More broadly, our work provides insights into how spatial patterns are established in developing embryos and the mechanisms by which phenotypic novelty originates.

Funding

This project was supported by an NIH grant to R.M. (R35GM133758). M.R.J. was supported by an NIH fellowship (F32 GM139253). S.L. was supported by a Presidential Postdoctoral Research fellowship (Princeton University). B.J.B. was supported by an NIH training grant (T32GM007388). C.Y.F. was supported by an NIH fellowship (F32 GM139240-01). C.F.G.-J. is partially supported by UC Irvine Chancellor's ADVANCE Postdoctoral Fellowship Program. Q.N. was partially supported by an NSF grant DMS1763272 and a Simons Foundation grant (594598).

History

Publication Date

2023-12-01

Journal

Nature Ecology and Evolution

Volume

7

Issue

12

Pagination

17p. (p. 2143-2159)

Publisher

Springer Nature

ISSN

2397-334X

Rights Statement

© The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited 2023. Springer Nature or its licensor (e.g. a society or other partner) holds exclusive rights to this article under a publishing agreement with the author(s) or other rightsholder(s); author self-archiving of the accepted manuscript version of this article is solely governed by the terms of such publishing agreement and applicable law.

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