Cell Reports
Volume 10, Issue 4, 3 February 2015, Pages 551-561
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Article
Ancient Transposable Elements Transformed the Uterine Regulatory Landscape and Transcriptome during the Evolution of Mammalian Pregnancy

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2014.12.052Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • Thousands of genes gained uterine expression during the origins of pregnancy

  • Genes that mediate maternal-fetal immunotolerance evolved expression in Eutherians

  • Ancient transposable elements donated cis-regulatory elements to recruited genes

  • Ancient transposable elements coordinate the uterine progesterone response

Summary

A major challenge in biology is determining how evolutionarily novel characters originate; however, mechanistic explanations for the origin of new characters are almost completely unknown. The evolution of pregnancy is an excellent system in which to study the origin of novelties because mammals preserve stages in the transition from egg laying to live birth. To determine the molecular bases of this transition, we characterized the pregnant/gravid uterine transcriptome from tetrapods to trace the evolutionary history of uterine gene expression. We show that thousands of genes evolved endometrial expression during the origins of mammalian pregnancy, including genes that mediate maternal-fetal communication and immunotolerance. Furthermore, thousands of cis-regulatory elements that mediate decidualization and cell-type identity in decidualized stromal cells are derived from ancient mammalian transposable elements (TEs). Our results indicate that one of the defining mammalian novelties evolved from DNA sequences derived from ancient mammalian TEs co-opted into hormone-responsive regulatory elements distributed throughout the genome.

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This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/).

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Present address: Department of Internal Medicine, MSC08 4630, University of New Mexico, 2325 Camino de Saludo NE, CRF 121, Albuquerque, NM 87131-0001, USA

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Present address: Department of Genetics, Yale University Medical School, 336 Cedar Street, New Haven, CT 06510, USA

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Present address: Animal Physiology, Institute of Agricultural Sciences, ETH Zurich, Universitaetstrasse 2, 8092 Zurich, Switzerland