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Authors: Armand Marie Leroi

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These mutations disrupt a series of genes that, in homage to William Bateson, have come to be known as the homeotic genes.
There are eight of them, and they have names like Ultrabithorax, Antennapedia or, less euphemistically, ‘deformed’, that recall the strange flies produced when they are disrupted by mutation. They are the variables in a calculation that makes each segment distinct from any other.

The segmental calculator is a thing of beauty. It has the economical boolean logic of a computer programme. Each of the proteins encoded by the homeotic genes is present in certain segments. Some are present in the head, others in the thorax, others in the abdomen. The identity of a segment – the appendages it grows – depends on the precise combination of homeotic proteins present in its cells. The calculation for the third thoracic segment, which normally bears a haltere, looks something like this:

If Ultrabithorax is present

And all other posterior homeotic proteins are absent

Then third thoracic segment: HALTERE.

Which simply implies that Ultrabithorax is necessary if the third thoracic segment is to grow a haltere, that is, to
be
a third thoracic segment. Should the gene be crippled by a mutation, the protein that it encodes, if present at all, will be unable to do its work. The segment’s unique identity is lost; it becomes a second thoracic segment instead and carries wings.

When, in the 1980s, the homeotic genes were cloned and sequenced they proved to encode molecular switches: proteins that turn genes on and off. Molecular switches work by controlling the
production of messenger RNA. Most genes contain information to make proteins. But this information requires a means of transmission. That is the job of messenger RNA, a molecule much like DNA except that it is neither double nor a helix, but only a long string of nucleotides. Messenger RNA is a copy of DNA, produced by a device that travels down gene sequences rather as a locomotive travels down a track. Molecular switches – or, to give them their proper name, ‘transcription factors’ – control this. Binding to ‘regulatory elements’, small, exact DNA sequences that surround every gene, transcription factors reach over to the molecular engine that makes messenger RNA and attempt to influence its workings. Some transcription factors seek to speed the engine up; others to shut it down. Attached to their regulatory elements, transcription factors face each other over the double helix and dispute for control. Like all negotiations, the outcome depends on the balance of power: the diversity of the opposing forces, or just their numbers.

The sequences of the eight fly homeotic genes are quite different. Yet each has a region, a sequence of only 180 base-pairs, that encodes, with small variations, the following string of amino acids:

RRRGRQTYTRYQTLELEKEFHTNHYLTRRRRIEMAHALCLTERQIKIWFQNRRMKLKKEI.

This is the homeobox. In the sub-microscopic bulges and folds of a homeotic protein’s three-dimensional topology it is the homeobox sequence, nestling within the grooves of the double
helix of the DNA, that brings the homeotic proteins to their targets, the hundreds, perhaps thousands, of genes under their control. Subtle differences in the homeobox of each protein allows it to control particular suites of genes.

The discovery of the homeobox in 1984, distinctive as a Hapsburg’s lip, suggested that the homeotic genes were all related to each other, that they were a family. Other animals, it quickly became apparent, had homeobox genes as well. They were found in worms and in snails, in starfish, fish, mice, and they were found in us. Perhaps they were present in the very first animals that crawled out of the Pre-Cambrian ooze a billion years ago. Most excitingly, if homeobox genes formed the circuits of the fly’s calculator of parts, might they not do so for
all
creatures, even for humans? Molecular biologists are not a breed much given to hyperbole, but when they found the homeobox, they spoke of Holy Grails and of Rosetta Stones.

They were right to do so. Another of Vrolik’s specimens, this time a skeleton, shows why. At first glance it seems a rather dull sort of skeleton. It isn’t bent with rickets or bowed with achondroplasia; there is nothing unusual about it (though its skull, limbs and pelvis have evidently long gone astray). It is only an undulating vertebral column with brownish ribs on a rusted metal stand – an altogether abject thing. It is not even on display in the public galleries, but lives in a basement where it is shelved with dozens of other skeletons accumulated over a century but now largely surplus to requirements. And yet this skeleton enjoys a quiet renown. Each spring it sees the light of day as it is displayed to a
new batch of the Rijkuniversiteit’s medical students who are invited to identify its anomaly. This is surprisingly hard to spot, though obvious once pointed out – it is an extra pair of ribs.

Extra ribs have always caused trouble. In his
Pseudodoxia epidemica
Sir Thomas Browne relates how once, when the anatomist Renaldus Columbus dissected a woman at Pisa who happened to have thirteen ribs on one side, ‘there arose a party that cried him down, and even unto oaths affirmed, this was the rib wherein a woman exceeded’. ‘Were this true,’ Browne continues, ‘this would oracularly silence that dispute out of which side
Eve
was framed.’ The influence of Genesis II: 21–22 on popular anatomy has been a baleful one. I recently asked a class of thirty biology undergraduates (among them Britain’s best and brightest) whether men and women had the same number of ribs: about half a dozen of them thought not. ‘But,’ as Sir Thomas says with customary vigour, ‘this will not consist with reason or inspection. For if we survey the Sceleton of both sexes, and therein the compage of bones, we shall readily discover that men and women have four and twenty ribs, that is, twelve on each side.’ Just so. And yet extra ribs are surprisingly common: one in every ten or so adults has them (but they are no more or less frequent in women than men).

Most of us have thirty-three vertebrae. Starting at the head, there are seven neck vertebrae, then twelve rib-bearing vertebrae, then five vertebrae in the lower back, and another nine fused together to make the sacrum and coccyx or tail bones. In most people with extra ribs, this pattern is disrupted. A vertebra that normally does not bear ribs has become transformed into one that does. Sometimes this means the loss of a neck vertebra,
sometimes the loss of one in the lower back; either way, homeotic transformations are much like the segment transformations that geneticists seek in their mutant flies.

It is no surprise, then, that the identity of each vertebra is controlled by homeotic genes much like those that keep a fly’s segments in order. Of course, matters are rather more complicated for us. Flies have only eight homeotic genes while mammals have thirty-nine, so many that the evocative Latinate names have been dropped: no Ultrabithorax or proboscipedia for us, but only the prefix Hox followed by unmemorable letters and digits: Hoxa3, Hoxd13 and so on. In mammals, as in flies, homeotic genes begin their work early in the life of the embryo. Vertebrae develop from blocks of mesoderm called somites that form on either side of the nerve cord like rows of little bricks. Each homeotic protein is present in just some of the somites. All thirty-nine are present in the tail somites, but then they fall away, in ones and twos, so that finally only a handful remain in the somites closest to the head. The vertebral calculator is not very economical. For the seventh neck vertebra it looks something like this:

If Hoxa4 is present

And Hoxa5 is present

And Hoxb5 is present

And Hoxa6 is present

And Hoxb6 is present

And all other posterior Hox genes are absent

Then a seventh neck vertebra will form: NO RIBS

Should a mutation cripple any one of the genes that encode these five proteins, the seventh vertebra will transform into its neighbour, the eighth vertebra, and gain a pair of ribs.

S
OMITES IN A HUMAN EMBRYO
. F
ROM
F
RANZ
K
EIBEL
1908

Normentafel zur Entwicklungsgeschichte des Menschen.

Distinguishing one vertebra from another is merely one instance of a problem that the embryo must solve repeatedly: the differentiation of parts along the head-to-tail axis. The embryo must solve this problem for the neural tube, uniform at first, but which later forms a brain at one end. It must solve it for the bones of the head – so that maxillae are formed next to mandibles and each is attached to its appropriate nerves and muscles. And it must solve this problem for the gut tube that becomes the stomach, liver, pancreas and intestines as well as the
ventral blood vessel that becomes the four chambers of the heart. The Hox gene calculator is involved in all this.

How it works in mammals is known from mice in which one or more Hox genes have been deleted. Such mice are often profoundly disordered. Some have fore-limbs that are strangely close to their heads; others are missing parts of their hindbrains or cranial nerves. Some have hernias that cause their intestines to bulge into their thoracic cavities, or else open neural tubes. Some are missing their thymus, thyroid and parathyroid glands and have abnormal hearts and faces; some walk on their toes instead of on the soles of their feet, even as their hindquarters convulse uncontrollably. Most mice in which even one Hox gene has been deleted die young.

The Hox gene calculator is thought to work in humans in much the same way. The evidence for this belief is indirect and comes from a single 1997 study in which a group of London researchers stained six RU486 – ‘morning after pill’ – aborted embryos with molecular probes to reveal the times and place of homeotic gene expression. The embryos were four weeks old, about five millimetres long, and came from unwanted pregnancies. In autoradiographs of the sliced and stained embryos, Hox gene activity appears as grainy streaks and patches of white against the dark outlines of nascent rhombocephalons and pharyngeal arches. The patterns of Hox gene activity are just what one would expect from mice.

This is important and gratifying to know. But the study has not been repeated. Studies on human embryos are rare. In the United Kingdom they can only be done once formidable
regulatory hurdles have been cleared; in the United States they can’t be done at all, at least not in federally funded institutions. The autoradiographs that are the raw data of such studies certainly have a disquieting quality about them. Perhaps this is because in death these embryos reveal a property – gene activity – that truly belongs to the living.

THREE THOUSAND SWITCHES

Writing of the ‘calculator of fate’ I have emphasised the roles of the thirty-nine Hox genes. But the human genome encodes some three thousand other transcription factors. Like the signalling molecules to which they respond, transcription factors come in families, of which the homeobox genes are only one. These transcription factors are the circuit components, the switches if you will, that are thrown as cells calculate their fate. This computational process is a progressive one in which the earliest cells of the embryo, naive and confronted with a world of possibilities ahead of them, are ever more channelled into becoming one thing rather than another.

Some of these calculations, such as those that go into the vertebrae, are understood; others we are just learning about. In 1904, a Tyrolean innkeeper slaughtered one of the chickens wandering around his yard and found that it had no fewer than seven hearts. A curiosity? Perhaps. But in 2001 it was discovered that if a gene called ?-catenin is deleted in mice, the result is an embryo with a string of extra hearts each of which beats and pumps blood. The extra hearts are made from tissue normally
destined for the guts; and so a small part of another calculation – the one that decides whether a naive cell in the embryo becomes endoderm or mesoderm – stands revealed. Other disorders suggest the existence of calculations about which we know nothing. There is, it seems, a row of obscure glands in our eyelids (the Meibomian glands) that sometimes, albeit rarely, tranform into hair follicles. Infants who have lost their Meibomian glands have, instead, two or even three rows of eyelashes on each lid. It’s a trait that runs in families, but the gene responsible for directing eyelid epidermis into a gland rather than a hair follicle has not yet been found (and one doubts that anyone is looking).

And then there is Disorganisation. A mouse mutant of unparalleled obscurity – it has been the subject of only three papers – it is also one of the strangest. Three properties make Disorganisation strange. The first is the pervasiveness of its effects upon the mice that carry it. It would be gratuitously macabre to detail the appearance of these mutant mice: it is enough to say that the deformities of a single litter would embrace the contents of a sizeable teratology museum. And yet, the mutation is not inevitably lethal. Disorganisation’s second strange property is that no two mutant mice have the same set of defects. Some are hardly afflicted at all and can survive and breed, others are born mutilated but alive, yet others die in the womb. This variability extends to within a given mouse: a left kidney (or lung, or leg) may be destroyed even as its right cognate remains untouched. Finally, there is the strange propensity of the mutant mice to generate extra parts, not only
supernumerary limbs (which can appear almost anywhere on the body), but also extra internal organs such as livers, spleens and intestines. They also have odd tumor-like structures embedded in their musculature and skin that seem to be the remains of supernumerary organs which never made it all the way. Is there a human Disorganisation gene? No human family showing Disorganisation-like properties seems to be known. However, some clinical geneticists have pointed to infants with especially bizarre suites of congenital anomalies as possible carriers of a cognate mutation. One such infant, a boy born in 1989, had nine toes on one foot and tumor-like pads of tissue scattered around his body. He also had a finger, complete with fingernail, growing from the right side of his ribcage. The Disorganisation gene has not yet been found, though it surely will be soon. Meanwhile, the mice speak. They tell of some critical, global, and quite unknown component of the embryo’s calculator of fate, one that has gone utterly awry.

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