FIGURE SUMMARY
Title

Ankfn1-mutant vestibular defects require loss of both ancestral and derived paralogs for penetrance in zebrafish

Authors
Ross, K.D., Ren, J., Zhang, R., Chi, N.C., Hamilton, B.A.
Source
Full text @ G3 (Bethesda)

Conserved features of Ankfn1 homologs. For each histogram a–f) a higher bar indicates higher conservation or constraint at a single residue site for an alignment of Holozoan ANKFN1 proteins. a) Jensen–Shannon divergence (JSD) scores standardized to a range of zero to one. Colored bars above the histogram indicate the positions of the two ANK repeats (ANK1, 2) and FN3 domains, the conserved GLYLGYLK peptide, and the RA domain of ancestral paralogs. A vertebrate-conserved DVLQ peptide (red line) marks the carboxyterminal extent of homology between ancestral and derived paralogs. Gray ovals indicate approximate positions of the three conserved nonmotif regions of Zhang et al. (2015). b) JSD scores at the conserved peptide, y-axis same as (a). c) ScoreCons residue conservation using Valdar’s scoring method. d) ScoreCons scores at the conserved peptide, y-axis same as (c). e) MAPP median score for substitution at each site. f) MAPP scores at the conserved peptide, y-axis same as (e). g) AlphaFold2-predicted structure for mouse ANKFN1 protein, showing positions of the ANK, FN, and GLYLGYLK (yellow highlight) regions and confidence scores. h) Detailed view of the structure in (g) showing the predicted GLYLGY beta strand in relation to flanking strands.

Targeted mutagenesis of Ankfn1 homologs. Peptide and genomic sequences for targeted sites in D. rerio Ankfn1 homologs. a) Ankfn1 on chromosome 12 is a derived paralog that includes two ANK and one FN3 domain but no RA domain. b) Ankfn1-like on chromosome 24 is an ancestral paralog including the RA domain. The targeted GLYLGYLK site is highlighted in yellow. CRISPR guide RNA sites are underlined and protospacer adjacent motifs are boxed in each reference sequence. Recovered mutations are shown with deleted base pairs as dashes and insertion of a frame-shifting duplicated sequence (gray shadow) at chromosome 24 shown in a box below the caret.

Swim bladder and posture defects in Chr12/Chr24 mutant zebrafish. By 5 days postfertilization mutant animals frequently failed to maintain dorsal orientation while swimming, with unaffected control animals maintaining a dorsal-up posture while double-mutant animals frequently held a rotated posture, with dorsoventral axis at a skew angle or fully to the side (top view). Swim bladders typically failed to inflate in mutant animals (side view, red arrows).

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Acknowledgments
This image is the copyrighted work of the attributed author or publisher, and ZFIN has permission only to display this image to its users. Additional permissions should be obtained from the applicable author or publisher of the image. Full text @ G3 (Bethesda)