Title of article :
Evolution of the vertebrate jaw: comparative embryology
and molecular developmental biology reveal the factors
behind evolutionary novelty
Author/Authors :
Shigeru Kuratani، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
It is generally believed that the jaw arose through the simple transformation of an ancestral rostral gill arch. The
gnathostome jaw differentiates from
Hox
-free crest cells in the mandibular arch, and this is also apparent in the
lamprey. The basic
Hox
code, including the
Hox
-free default state in the mandibular arch, may have been present
in the common ancestor, and jaw patterning appears to have been secondarily constructed in the gnathostomes.
The distribution of the cephalic neural crest cells is similar in the early pharyngula of gnathostomes and lampreys,
but different cell subsets form the oral apparatus in each group through epithelial-mesenchymal interactions: and
this heterotopy is likely to have been an important evolutionary change that permitted jaw differentiation. This
theory implies that the premandibular crest cells differentiate into the upper lip, or the dorsal subdivision of the
oral apparatus in the lamprey, whereas the equivalent cell population forms the trabecula of the skull base in gnathostomes.
Because the gnathostome oral apparatus is derived exclusively from the mandibular arch, the concepts
‘oral’ and ‘mandibular’ must be dissociated. The ‘lamprey trabecula’ develops from mandibular mesoderm, and is not
homologous with the gnathostome trabecula, which develops from premandibular crest cells. Thus the jaw evolved
as an evolutionary novelty through tissue rearrangements and topographical changes in tissue interactions
Keywords :
evolutionary novelty , Jaw , Lamprey , Neural crest , pharynx. , Hoxgenes
Journal title :
Journal of Anatomy Wily
Journal title :
Journal of Anatomy Wily