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The Ascendency of Developmental Genetics, or How the T Complex Educated a Generation of Developmental Biologists
Virginia E. Papaioannouaa Department of Genetics and Development, College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University, New York, New York 10032
THIS past year marked the 60th anniversary of the publication in GENETICS of a remarkable scientific paper from a remarkable woman, Salome Gluecksohn-Waelsch (then Gluecksohn-Schoenheimer), first describing the embryonic development of the tailless phenotypes resulting from the interaction of T (Brachyury) with t "alleles" (![]()
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Salome has always been one to view scientific progress in a historical context and always has pertinent examples at the ready. Anyone who ever gave a research talk with Salome sitting in the front row expected, and possibly dreaded, the inevitable moment when she got to her feet with the first question and said something like "That is very interesting and reminds me of an experiment done by `X' many years ago..." Humility is not a usual characteristic of research scientists, but Salome had a way of fitting "new" discoveries into a historical framework that forced one to realize that the same biological issues have been around for a long time. The seduction of technology may have led us to believe that we were posing novel questions and discovering things that could lead to enlightenment, but that first question from the audience reminded us of our intellectual inheritance and the myriad contributions that simpler methods and inductive reasoning had made in leading us to our point of departure in a new study. And so, using Salome's 1938 article as a point of departure rather than a beginning, I offer some impressions on how the specter of the T complex affected a generation of mammalian geneticists, developmental biologists, and developmental geneticists.
The appropriately named T complex spawned an entire field of study that for years was plagued by complex genetics, bizarre interactions, contradictions, and misinterpretations. For those of you who might have been frightened out of the field early on, as I was for many years, and never had the time or inclination to get back to it, you will be happy to hear that the complexities have now been satisfactorily resolved by combinations of genetic, molecular, and evolutionary approaches, and the accepted view can be quite simply explained (![]()
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To paraphrase the eloquent explanations of Lee Silver (who was never frightened by the problem; ![]()
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Over more than a million years, additional TRD genes and additional inversions were recruited to the t hap-lotypes, effectively increasing the genetic expanse of the T-complex region. In terms of its contribution to the evolution of the T complex, only the tail interaction between different t haplotypes and T, a mutation on the non-t-bearing or wild-type chromosome, remains to be explained. However, the T complex is far from solved and we are now in the early stages of the difficult task of identifying specific genes responsible for the characteristic features of the T complex, assigning them to chromosomal positions and determining their molecular function.
With hindsight, it is easy to see why the T complex remained mysterious for so long. It was first described in the language of classical genetics at a time when the field of mammalian developmental biology and especially mammalian developmental genetics barely existed. It seemed to violate the most basic rule of inheritance, Mendel's first law, and consequently to wreak havoc with Hardy-Weinberg. The mechanisms by which the rules might be broken generated speculations that were hard to prove or disprove. At the time, the field of developmental biology was dominated by studies of lower organisms, and the role of genes in controlling developmental mechanisms was largely ignored. The discovery of the profound effects of T and the t alleles on developmental processes provided an early indication that genes might play a role in controlling developmental mechanisms in vertebrates, but ironically, misinterpretation and false assumptions led developmental biology down the wrong path for many years. It was at first an uneasy alliance between developmental biology and genetics.
Salome joined L. C. Dunn's lab in 1933 after training with Spemann in early amphibian development and began a career studying the complexities of gene actions and interactions and their role on developmental mechanisms in mammals. From the beginning, she and Dunn recognized the paradox that the complex phenotypic manifestations and the existence of complementation between the T/t alleles indicated separate loci, while other features, like the lack of recombination and the interaction affecting tail length, pointed to a single (complex) locus. Both possibilities were presented in a 1943 paper, but it was further stated that genotypically related effects could have a degree of independence in development and that a thorough study of development "might reveal common sources from which diverse effects arise" (![]()
An interesting, two-part article in 1964 by Dunn and Dorothea Bennett hints at the schizophrenia induced by the T complex. In part I, Dunn discusses the t alleles in terms of a juxtaposition of separate genes affecting related developmental processes that have persisted as a block of genetic material (![]()
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The 1960s and the following decade saw tremendous changes in the way vertebrate, especially mammalian, developmental biology was approached. The development of new experimental embryological techniques, such as chimeras (![]()
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For many years after it was discovered, the T complex fostered the development of concepts of genes as interrelated functional units, moving the emphasis away from the gene as an independently acting unit and integrating ideas expounded by Hans Gruneberg on pedigrees of causes in development. On the basis of the assumption that the t alleles were structurally similar and specified membrane components, Bennett and colleagues proposed an elegant, unifying theory of the T locus as a master developmental locus, explaining the varying time of death caused by different t alleles as effects on cell-cell interactions at successive critical stages of development (![]()
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On the other hand, a candidate gene for the tail interaction effect, called T2, has been identified and cloned in the laboratory of Karen Artzt (![]()
The key to T itself came with the cloning of the gene and the discovery that it encodes a transcription factor (![]()
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Uncovered on the basis of homology to the DNA-binding domain of the T-locus gene product, the T-box gene family is a novel family of transcription factors. T-box genes have been identified in the genomes of a wide range of metazoans from Caenorhabditis elegans to human. At last tally, 10 different genes, in addition to T, have been identified in the mouse and are found scattered through the genome. From all indications, the T-box gene family is implicated as playing critical roles in development: first, by the well-studied mutant phenotype of the proband of the family, T, then by the isolation of novel T-box genes from embryonic cDNA libraries and the demonstration of extensive embryonic expression, and finally, in addition to the T mutations known in many species, by the developmental phenotypes that result from other T-box gene mutations. Naturally occurring mutations in two T-box genes in humans are responsible for dysmorphic syndromes affecting the development of multiple organs (![]()
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In a GENETICS Perspectives article written nearly a decade ago, Salome Gluecksohn-Waelsch discussed Guido Pontecorvo's and Barbara McClintock's ideas on biological complexity and their application to the T complex. She pointed out that "eventually clarifying the complexities that characterize the correlation between the molecular identification of gene sequences in this interesting chromosomal region and their far-removed phenotypic expression" will require a great deal of patience and an analytical approach that takes into account the complexity of organisms (![]()
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| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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I thank Lee Silver and Deborah Chapman for reading the manuscript. This work was supported in part by the Raymond and Beverly Sackler Foundation and National Institutes of Health grant HD 33082. The photograph of Salome Gluecksohn-Waelsch was kindly provided by Vivian Gradus.
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