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Hox genes are required for the development of the intestinal cecum, a major organ of plant-eating species. We have analyzed the transcriptional regulation of Hoxd genes in cecal buds and show that they are controlled by a series of enhancers located in a gene desert flanking the HoxD cluster. The start site of two opposite long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs), Hotdog and Twin of Hotdog, selectively contacts the expressed Hoxd genes in the framework of a topological domain, coinciding with robust transcription of these genes during cecum budding. Both lncRNAs are specifically transcribed in the cecum, albeit bearing no detectable function in trans. Hedgehogs have kept this regulatory potential despite the absence of the cecum, suggesting that these mechanisms are used in other developmental situations. In this context, we discuss the implementation of a common "budding toolkit" between the cecum and the limbs.
Denis Duboule, Lucille Delisle, Alexandre Gauthier Aurèle Mayran, Hocine Rekaik, Aurélie Hintermann, Célia Corinne Renée Bochaton
Didier Trono, Jacques Fellay, Priscilla Turelli, Christian Axel Wandall Thorball, Evaristo Jose Planet Letschert, Julien Léonard Duc, Romain Forey, Bara Khubieh, Sandra Eloise Kjeldsen, Alexandre Coudray, Michaël Imbeault, Cyril David Son-Tuyên Pulver, Jonas Caspar De Tribolet-Hardy