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Developmental Genetics

How genes and the regulatory networks they form control development, identified largely through mutations that change the body plan.

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Definition

Developmental genetics is the study of how genes and their regulatory interactions direct the processes of development, using mutations, gene-expression analysis, and model organisms to link specific genes to the patterning and formation of the body.

Scope

This area covers the genetic control of development: the master regulatory genes that pattern the body (notably the Hox genes), the gene-regulatory networks that orchestrate developmental decisions, the maternal-effect and segmentation gene hierarchies revealed by genetic screens, and the epigenetic mechanisms that maintain developmental gene-expression states. It centres on the use of mutations and model organisms to dissect how the genome builds an organism.

Sub-topics

Core questions

  • Which genes control the major decisions of development, and what do they do when mutated?
  • How do genes that pattern the body axis specify the identity of body regions?
  • How are developmental decisions organized into gene-regulatory networks?
  • How are developmental gene-expression states inherited through cell division?

Key theories

Genetic hierarchy of body patterning
Systematic genetic screens revealed that development proceeds through an ordered hierarchy of genes — maternal, gap, pair-rule, segment-polarity, and homeotic — each refining the pattern laid down by the previous level.
Homeotic genes specify segmental identity
Clustered homeotic (Hox) genes assign distinct identities to body segments along the head-to-tail axis, so that mutations can transform one body part into the likeness of another, demonstrating a genetic code for regional identity.

Mechanisms

Developmental genetics works by identifying genes whose mutation alters development and ordering them into pathways. In the fly, maternal-effect genes deposit gradients in the egg that activate gap genes, which in turn regulate pair-rule and segment-polarity genes to subdivide the embryo, and homeotic genes that assign identity to each segment. These genes encode transcription factors and signaling components that act within gene-regulatory networks — interconnected sets of genes that control one another's expression and implement developmental decisions. Epigenetic mechanisms, including chromatin modifications, maintain these expression states so that once a regional identity is set it is stably propagated.

Clinical relevance

Many human developmental disorders arise from mutations in the conserved genes and networks first characterized in model organisms, and the same regulatory genes are implicated in cancer when misregulated. This entry is educational and does not provide clinical guidance.

History

Building on Morgan's foundational fly genetics, Lewis analysed the bithorax complex of homeotic genes, and Nüsslein-Volhard and Wieschaus carried out saturation mutagenesis screens that defined the segmentation gene hierarchy. Their combined work, recognized with a Nobel Prize, established the genetic logic of development.

Key figures

  • Edward B. Lewis
  • Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard
  • Eric Wieschaus
  • Thomas Hunt Morgan

Related topics

Seminal works

  • lewis1978
  • nussleinvolhard1980
  • gilbert2016

Frequently asked questions

What are homeotic genes?
They are master regulatory genes that assign identity to regions of the body; when mutated they can transform one body part into another, such as turning an antenna into a leg in the fruit fly.
Why are fruit flies so important in developmental genetics?
Large-scale mutation screens in flies identified the ordered hierarchy of genes that pattern the embryo, and many of these genes turned out to be conserved across animals, including humans.

Methods for this concept

Related concepts