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1.
J Comp Neurol ; 532(6): e25644, 2024 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38852044

RESUMO

For postmetamorphic specimens of amphioxus (Cephalochordata), serial block-face scanning electron microscopy (SBSEM) is used to describe the long-ignored Rohde-like cells (RLCs) at the extreme posterior end of the dorsal nerve cord. These cells, numbering about three dozen in all, are divisible into a group with larger diameters running near the dorsal side of the cord and a more ventral group with smaller diameters closely associated with the central canal of the neurocoel. It is possible that the smaller ventral cells might be generated at the ependymal zone of the dorsal nerve cord and later migrate to a dorsal position, although a functional reason for this remains a mystery. All the RLCs have conspicuous regions of microvilli covering as much as 40% of their surface; limited data (by others) on the more anterior bona fide Rohde cells also indicate an extensive microvillar surface. Thus, both the RLCs and the better-known Rohde cells appear to be rhabdomeric photoreceptors, although a specific function for this feature is currently unknown. Even more perplexingly, although the Rohde cells are quintessential neurons extending giant processes, each RLC comprises a perikaryon that does not bear any neurites.


Assuntos
Anfioxos , Animais , Microscopia Eletrônica de Varredura , Neurônios/ultraestrutura , Neurônios/citologia
2.
Integr Comp Biol ; 2024 Apr 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38599626

RESUMO

How animal embryos determine their early cell fates is an important question in developmental biology. In various model animals asymmetrically localized maternal transcripts play important roles in axial patterning and cell fate specification. Cephalochordates (amphioxus), which have three living genera (Asymmetron, Epigonichthys, Branchiostoma), are an early branching chordate lineage and thus occupy a key phylogenetic position for understanding the evolution of chordate developmental mechanisms. It has been shown that in the zygote of Brachiostoma amphioxus, which possess bilateral gonads flanking both sides of their trunk region, maternal transcripts of germline determinants form a compact granule. During early embryogenesis this granule is inherited by a single blastomere that subsequently gives rise to a cluster of cells displaying typical characteristics of primordial germ cells (PGC). These PGCs then come to lie in the tailbud region and proliferate during posterior elongation of the larva to join in the gonad anlagen at the ventral tip of the developing myomeres in amphioxus larvae. However, in Asymmetron and Epigonichthys amphioxus, whose gonads are present only on the right side of their body, nothing is known about their PGC development or the cellular/morphogenetic processes resulting in the asymmetric distribution of gonads. Using conserved germline determinants as markers, we show that similarly to Brachiostoma amphioxus, Asymmetron also employ a preformation mechanism to specify their PGCs, suggesting that this mechanism represents an ancient trait dating back to the common ancestor of Cephalochordates. Surprisingly, we found that Asymmetron PGCs are initially deposited on both sides of the body during early larval development; however, the left side PGCs cease to exist in young juveniles, suggesting that PGCs are eliminated from the left body side during larval development or following metamorphosis. This is reminiscent of the PGC development in the sea urchin embryo, and we discuss the implications of this observation for the evolution of developmental mechanisms.

3.
J Morphol ; 285(1): e21667, 2024 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38100741

RESUMO

Serial block-face scanning electron microscopy of the tail tip of post-metamorphic amphioxus (Branchiostoma floridae) revealed some terminal myomeres never been seen before with other techniques. The morphology of these myomeres differed markedly from the chevron shapes of their more anterior counterparts. Histologically, these odd-shaped myomeres ranged from empty vesicles bordered by undifferentiated cells to ventral sacs composed of well-developed myotome, dermatome, and sclerotome. Strikingly, several of these ventral sacs gave rise to a nipple-like dorsal projection composed either entirely of sclerotome or a mixture of sclerotome and myotome. Considered as a whole, from posterior to anterior, these odd-shaped posterior myomeres suggested that their more substantial ventral part may represent the ventral limb of a chevron, while the delicate projection represents a nascent dorsal limb. This scenario contrasts with formation of chevron-shaped myomeres along most of the antero-posterior axis. Although typical chevron formation in amphioxus is surprisingly poorly studied, it seems to be attained by a dorso-ventral extension of the myomere accompanied by the assumption of a V-shape; this is similar to what happens (at least superficially) in developing fishes. Another unusual feature of the odd-shaped posterior myomeres of amphioxus is their especially distended sclerocoels. One possible function for these might be to protect the posterior end of the central nervous system from trauma when the animals burrow into the substratum.


Assuntos
Anfioxos , Músculo Esquelético , Cauda , Microscopia Eletrônica de Volume , Animais , Peixes , Anfioxos/ultraestrutura , Mesoderma/diagnóstico por imagem , Mesoderma/ultraestrutura , Músculo Esquelético/diagnóstico por imagem , Músculo Esquelético/ultraestrutura , Cauda/diagnóstico por imagem , Cauda/ultraestrutura
4.
Biol Bull ; 244(2): 71-81, 2023 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37725696

RESUMO

AbstractWithin phylum Chordata, the subphylum Cephalochordata (amphioxus and lancelets) has figured large in considerations of the evolutionary origin of the vertebrates. To date, these discussions have been predominantly based on knowledge of a single cephalochordate genus (Branchiostoma), almost to the exclusion of the other two genera (Asymmetron and Epigonichthys). This uneven pattern is illustrated by cephalochordate hematology, until now known entirely from work done on Branchiostoma. The main part of the present study is to describe hemocytes in the dorsal aorta of a species of Asymmetron by serial block-face scanning electron microscopy. This technique, which demonstrates three-dimensional fine structure, showed that the hemocytes have a relatively uniform morphology characterized by an oval shape and scanty cytoplasm. Ancillary information is also included for Branchiostoma hemocytes, known from previous studies to have relatively abundant cytoplasm; our serial block-face scanning electron microscopy provides more comprehensive views of the highly variable shapes of these cells, which typically extend one or several pseudopodium-like protrusions. The marked difference in hemocyte morphology found between Asymmetron and Branchiostoma was unexpected and directs attention to investigating comparable cells in the genus Epigonichthys. A broader knowledge of the hemocytes in all three cephalochordate genera would provide more balanced insights into the evolution of vertebrate hematopoiesis.


Assuntos
Anfioxos , Animais , Bahamas , Cefalocordados , Hemócitos
5.
J Morphol ; 283(10): 1289-1298, 2022 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35971624

RESUMO

Tissues of adult cephalochordates include sparsely distributed fibroblasts. Previous work on these cells has left unsettled such questions as their developmental origin, range of functions, and even their overall shape. Here, we describe fibroblasts of a cephalochordate, the Bahamas lancelet, Asymmetron lucayanum, by serial block-face scanning electron microscopy to demonstrate their three-dimensional (3D) distribution and fine structure in a 0.56-mm length of the tail. The technique reveals in detail their position, abundance, and morphology. In the region studied, we found only 20 fibroblasts, well separated from one another. Each was strikingly stellate with long cytoplasmic processes rather similar to those of a vertebrate telocyte, a possibly fortuitous resemblance that is considered in the discussion section. In the cephalochordate dermis, the fibroblasts were never linked with one another, although they occasionally formed close associations of unknown significance with other cell types. The fibroblasts, in spite of their name, showed no signs of directly synthesizing fibrillar collagen. Instead, they appeared to be involved in the production of nonfibrous components of the extracellular matrix-both by the release of coarsely granular dense material and by secretion of more finely granular material by the local breakdown of their cytoplasmic processes. For context, the 3D structures of two other mesoderm-derived tissues (the midline mesoderm and the posteriormost somite) are also described for the region studied.


Assuntos
Anfioxos , Animais , Bahamas , Derme/diagnóstico por imagem , Fibroblastos , Microscopia Eletrônica de Varredura
6.
Int J Hematol ; 115(4): 457-469, 2022 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35316498

RESUMO

ADAMTS13, a metalloproteinase, specifically cleaves unusually large multimers of von Willebrand factor (VWF), newly released from vascular endothelial cells. The ratio of ADAMTS13 activity to VWF antigen (ADAMTS13/VWF) and indicators of the alternative complement pathway (C3a and sC5b-9) are both related to the severity of COVID-19. The ADAMTS13/VWF ratio is generally moderately decreased (0.18-0.35) in patients with severe COVID-19. When these patients experience cytokine storms, both interleukin-8 and TNFα stimulate VWF release from vascular endothelial cells, while interleukin-6 inhibits both production of ADAMTS13 and its interaction with VWF, resulting in localized severe deficiency of ADAMTS13 activity. Platelet factor 4 and thrombospondin-1, both released upon platelet activation, bind to the VWF-A2 domain and enhance the blockade of ADAMTS13 function. Thus, the released unusually-large VWF multimers remain associated with the vascular endothelial cell surface, via anchoring with syndecan-1 in the glycocalyx. Unfolding of the VWF-A2 domain, which has high sequence homology with complement factor B, allows the domain to bind to activated complement C3b, providing a platform for complement activation of the alternative pathway. The resultant C3a and C5a generate tissue factor-rich neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs), which induce the mixed immunothrombosis, fibrin clots and platelet aggregates typically seen in patients with severe COVID-19.


Assuntos
Proteína ADAMTS13 , COVID-19 , Síndrome da Liberação de Citocina , Fator de von Willebrand , Proteína ADAMTS13/metabolismo , COVID-19/imunologia , Via Alternativa do Complemento , Células Endoteliais/metabolismo , Humanos , Fator de von Willebrand/metabolismo
7.
Curr Top Dev Biol ; 147: 563-594, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35337463

RESUMO

Amphioxus (cepholochordates) have long been used to infer how the vertebrates evolved from their invertebrate ancestors. However, some of the body part homologies between amphioxus and vertebrates have been controversial. This is not surprising as the amphioxus and vertebrate lineages separated half a billion years ago-plenty of time for independent loss and independent gain of features. The development of new techniques in the late 20th and early 21st centuries including transmission electron microscopy and serial blockface scanning electron microscopy in combination with in situ hybridization and immunocytochemistry to reveal spatio-temporal patterns of gene expression and gene products have greatly strengthened inference of some homologies (like those between regions of the central nervous system), although others (like nephridia) still need further support. These major advances in establishing homologies between amphioxus and vertebrates, together with strong support from comparative genomics, have firmly established amphioxus as a stand-in or model for the ancestral vertebrate.


Assuntos
Anfioxos , Animais , Sistema Nervoso Central , Evolução Molecular , Regulação da Expressão Gênica no Desenvolvimento , Anfioxos/genética , Filogenia , Vertebrados/genética
8.
Curr Top Dev Biol ; 141: 119-147, 2021.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33602486

RESUMO

How vertebrates evolved from their invertebrate ancestors has long been a central topic of discussion in biology. Evolutionary developmental biology (evodevo) has provided a new tool-using gene expression patterns as phenotypic characters to infer homologies between body parts in distantly related organisms-to address this question. Combined with micro-anatomy and genomics, evodevo has provided convincing evidence that vertebrates evolved from an ancestral invertebrate chordate, in many respects resembling a modern amphioxus. The present review focuses on the role of evodevo in addressing two major questions of chordate evolution: (1) how the vertebrate brain evolved from the much simpler central nervous system (CNS) in of this ancestral chordate and (2) whether or not the head mesoderm of this ancestor was segmented.


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Encéfalo , Sistema Nervoso Central , Cordados não Vertebrados , Vertebrados , Animais , Encéfalo/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Sistema Nervoso Central/anatomia & histologia , Sistema Nervoso Central/embriologia , Cordados não Vertebrados/anatomia & histologia , Cordados não Vertebrados/embriologia , Embrião não Mamífero , Regulação da Expressão Gênica no Desenvolvimento , Cabeça/embriologia , Lampreias/anatomia & histologia , Lampreias/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Anfioxos/embriologia , Crista Neural , Tubarões/embriologia
9.
Methods Mol Biol ; 2219: 1-29, 2021.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33074531

RESUMO

Cephalochordates (amphioxus) are invertebrate chordates closely related to vertebrates. As they are evolving very slowly, they are proving to be very appropriate for developmental genetics studies aimed at understanding how vertebrates evolved from their invertebrate ancestors. To date, techniques for gene knockdown and overexpression have been developed, but methods for continuous breeding cultures and generating germline mutants have been developed only recently. Here we describe methods for continuous laboratory breeding cultures of the cephalochordate Branchiostoma floridae and the TALEN and Tol2 methods for mutagenesis. Included are strategies for analyzing the mutants and raising successive generations to obtain homozygotes. These methods should be applicable to any warm water species of cephalochordates with a relatively short generation time of 3-4 months and a life span of 3 years or more.


Assuntos
Aquicultura/métodos , Anfioxos/genética , Mutagênese , Ração Animal/análise , Animais , Cruzamento , Feminino , Anfioxos/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Anfioxos/fisiologia , Masculino , Nucleases dos Efetores Semelhantes a Ativadores de Transcrição/genética
10.
Genome Biol ; 19(1): 209, 2018 11 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30486862

RESUMO

A recent study used 61 extant animal genomes to reconstruct the chromosomes of the hypothetical amniote ancestor. Comparison of this karyotype to the 17 chordate linkage groups previously inferred in the ancestral chordate indicated that two whole genome duplications probably occurred in the lineage preceding the ancestral vertebrate.


Assuntos
Evolução Molecular , Duplicação Gênica , Animais , Cromossomos , Genoma , Vertebrados/genética
11.
Development ; 145(15)2018 08 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29980563

RESUMO

The larval pharynx of the cephalochordate Branchiostoma (amphioxus) is asymmetrical. The mouth is on the left, and endostyle and gill slits are on the right. At the neurula, Nodal and Hedgehog (Hh) expression becomes restricted to the left. To dissect their respective roles in gill slit formation, we inhibited each pathway separately for 20 min at intervals during the neurula stage, before gill slits penetrate, and monitored the effects on morphology and expression of pharyngeal markers. The results pinpoint the short interval spanning the gastrula/neurula transition as the critical period for specification and positioning of future gill slits. Thus, reduced Nodal signaling shifts the gill slits ventrally, skews the pharyngeal domains of Hh, Pax1/9, Pax2/5/8, Six1/2 and IrxC towards the left, and reduces Hh and Tbx1/10 expression in endoderm and mesoderm, respectively. Nodal auto-regulates. Decreased Hh signaling does not affect gill slit positions or Hh or Nodal expression, but it does reduce the domain of Gli, the Hh target, in the pharyngeal endoderm. Thus, during the neurula stage, Nodal and Hh cooperate in gill slit development - Hh mediates gill slit formation and Nodal establishes their left-right position.


Assuntos
Padronização Corporal , Brânquias/metabolismo , Proteínas Hedgehog/metabolismo , Anfioxos/embriologia , Anfioxos/metabolismo , Proteína Nodal/metabolismo , Animais , Benzodioxóis/farmacologia , Padronização Corporal/efeitos dos fármacos , Padronização Corporal/genética , Embrião não Mamífero/efeitos dos fármacos , Embrião não Mamífero/metabolismo , Epistasia Genética/efeitos dos fármacos , Gástrula/efeitos dos fármacos , Gástrula/embriologia , Gástrula/metabolismo , Regulação da Expressão Gênica no Desenvolvimento/efeitos dos fármacos , Brânquias/efeitos dos fármacos , Proteínas Hedgehog/genética , Imidazóis/farmacologia , Anfioxos/efeitos dos fármacos , Anfioxos/genética , Larva/efeitos dos fármacos , Larva/metabolismo , Mesoderma/efeitos dos fármacos , Mesoderma/embriologia , Mesoderma/metabolismo , Proteína Nodal/genética , Faringe/efeitos dos fármacos , Faringe/embriologia , Faringe/metabolismo , Piridinas/farmacologia , Alcaloides de Veratrum/farmacologia
12.
Int J Dev Biol ; 61(10-11-12): 575-583, 2017.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29319106

RESUMO

Humans (at least a select few) have long known about the cephalochordate amphioxus, first as something to eat and later as a subject for scientific study. The rate of publication on these animals has waxed and waned several times. The first big surge, in the late nineteenth century, was stimulated by Darwin's evolutionary ideas and by Kowalevsky's embryologic findings suggesting that an amphioxus-like creature might have bridged the gap between the invertebrates and the vertebrates. Interest declined sharply in the early twentieth century and remained low for the next 50 years. An important contributing factor (in addition to inhibition by two world wars and the Great Depression) was the indifference of the new evolutionary synthesis toward broad phylogenetic problems like the origin of the vertebrates. Then, during the 1960s and 1970s, interest in amphioxus resurged, driven especially by increased government support for basic science as well as opportunities presented by electron microscopy. After faltering briefly in the 1980s (electron microscopists were running out of amphioxus tissues to study), a third and still-continuing period of intensive amphioxus research began in the early 1990s, stimulated by the advent of evolutionary developmental biology (evo-devo) and genomics. The volume of studies peaked in 2008 with the publication of the genome of the Florida amphioxus. Since then, although the number of papers per year has dropped somewhat, sequencing of additional genomes and transcriptomes of several species of amphioxus (both in the genus Branchiostoma and in a second genus, Asymmetron) is providing the raw material for addressing the major unanswered question of the relationship between genotype and phenotype.


Assuntos
Padronização Corporal/genética , Biologia do Desenvolvimento/história , Genoma/genética , Anfioxos/genética , Animais , Biologia do Desenvolvimento/métodos , Evolução Molecular , História do Século XVIII , História do Século XIX , História do Século XX , História do Século XXI , Proteínas de Homeodomínio/genética , Proteínas de Homeodomínio/metabolismo , Anfioxos/classificação , Filogenia
13.
Genome Biol Evol ; 8(8): 2387-405, 2016 08 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27412606

RESUMO

Cephalochordates, the sister group of vertebrates + tunicates, are evolving particularly slowly. Therefore, genome comparisons between two congeners of Branchiostoma revealed so many conserved noncoding elements (CNEs), that it was not clear how many are functional regulatory elements. To more effectively identify CNEs with potential regulatory functions, we compared noncoding sequences of genomes of the most phylogenetically distant cephalochordate genera, Asymmetron and Branchiostoma, which diverged approximately 120-160 million years ago. We found 113,070 noncoding elements conserved between the two species, amounting to 3.3% of the genome. The genomic distribution, target gene ontology, and enriched motifs of these CNEs all suggest that many of them are probably cis-regulatory elements. More than 90% of previously verified amphioxus regulatory elements were re-captured in this study. A search of the cephalochordate CNEs around 50 developmental genes in several vertebrate genomes revealed eight CNEs conserved between cephalochordates and vertebrates, indicating sequence conservation over >500 million years of divergence. The function of five CNEs was tested in reporter assays in zebrafish, and one was also tested in amphioxus. All five CNEs proved to be tissue-specific enhancers. Taken together, these findings indicate that even though Branchiostoma and Asymmetron are distantly related, as they are evolving slowly, comparisons between them are likely optimal for identifying most of their tissue-specific cis-regulatory elements laying the foundation for functional characterizations and a better understanding of the evolution of developmental regulation in cephalochordates.


Assuntos
Cefalocordados/genética , Sequência Conservada/genética , Evolução Molecular , Sequências Reguladoras de Ácido Nucleico/genética , Animais , Cordados/genética , Genoma , Anfioxos/genética , Especificidade de Órgãos/genética , Filogenia
14.
Sci Rep ; 6: 28350, 2016 06 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27311567

RESUMO

Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP) was originally found in cnidarians, and later in copepods and cephalochordates (amphioxus) (Branchiostoma spp). Here, we looked for GFP-encoding genes in Asymmetron, an early-diverged cephalochordate lineage, and found two such genes closely related to some of the Branchiostoma GFPs. Dim fluorescence was found throughout the body in adults of Asymmetron lucayanum, and, as in Branchiostoma floridae, was especially intense in the ripe ovaries. Spectra of the fluorescence were similar between Asymmetron and Branchiostoma. Lineage-specific expansion of GFP-encoding genes in the genus Branchiostoma was observed, largely driven by tandem duplications. Despite such expansion, purifying selection has strongly shaped the evolution of GFP-encoding genes in cephalochordates, with apparent relaxation for highly duplicated clades. All cephalochordate GFP-encoding genes are quite different from those of copepods and cnidarians. Thus, the ancestral cephalochordates probably had GFP, but since GFP appears to be lacking in more early-diverged deuterostomes (echinoderms, hemichordates), it is uncertain whether the ancestral cephalochordates (i.e. the common ancestor of Asymmetron and Branchiostoma) acquired GFP by horizontal gene transfer (HGT) from copepods or cnidarians or inherited it from the common ancestor of copepods and deuterostomes, i.e. the ancestral bilaterians.


Assuntos
Cefalocordados/genética , Proteínas de Fluorescência Verde/genética , Animais , Cefalocordados/classificação , Evolução Molecular , Feminino , Família Multigênica , Ovário/química , Filogenia
15.
Curr Biol ; 26(4): R146-52, 2016 Feb 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26906481

RESUMO

Tunicates, also called urochordates, are an extremely diverse subphylum of the Chordata, a phylum that also contains the vertebrates and cephalochordates. The tunicates seem to have undergone especially rapid evolution: while remaining exclusively marine, they have radiated to occupy habitats ranging from shallow water, to near shore to the open ocean and the deep sea. Furthermore, they have evolved a variety of remarkable reproductive strategies, combining asexual and sexual modes of reproduction that allow for very rapid expansion of populations. An outstanding question is what happened to allow tunicates to evolve so much faster than their nearest relatives, cephalochordates and vertebrates.


Assuntos
Urocordados/fisiologia , Animais , Evolução Biológica , Filogenia , Reprodução , Urocordados/classificação , Urocordados/genética
16.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci ; 370(1684)2015 Dec 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26554041

RESUMO

In the past 40 years, comparisons of developmental gene expression and mechanisms of development (evodevo) joined comparative morphology as tools for reconstructing long-extinct ancestral forms. Unfortunately, both approaches typically give congruent answers only with closely related organisms. Chordate nervous systems are good examples. Classical studies alone left open whether the vertebrate brain was a new structure or evolved from the anterior end of an ancestral nerve cord like that of modern amphioxus. Evodevo plus electron microscopy showed that the amphioxus brain has a diencephalic forebrain, small midbrain, hindbrain and spinal cord with parts of the genetic mechanisms for the midbrain/hindbrain boundary, zona limitans intrathalamica and neural crest. Evodevo also showed how extra genes resulting from whole-genome duplications in vertebrates facilitated evolution of new structures like neural crest. Understanding how the chordate central nervous system (CNS) evolved from that of the ancestral deuterostome has been truly challenging. The majority view is that this ancestor had a CNS with a brain that gave rise to the chordate CNS and, with loss of a discrete brain, to one of the two hemichordate nerve cords. The minority view is that this ancestor had no nerve cord; those in chordates and hemichordates evolved independently. New techniques such as phylostratigraphy may help resolve this conundrum.


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Sistema Nervoso Central/anatomia & histologia , Cordados/anatomia & histologia , Cordados/genética , Animais
17.
Nature ; 520(7548): 450-5, 2015 Apr 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25903626

RESUMO

Over the past 200 years, almost every invertebrate phylum has been proposed as a starting point for evolving vertebrates. Most of these scenarios are outdated, but several are still seriously considered. The short-range transition from ancestral invertebrate chordates (similar to amphioxus and tunicates) to vertebrates is well accepted. However, longer-range transitions leading up to the invertebrate chordates themselves are more controversial. Opinion is divided between the annelid and the enteropneust scenarios, predicting, respectively, a complex or a simple ancestor for bilaterian animals. Deciding between these ideas will be facilitated by further comparative studies of multicellular animals, including enigmatic taxa such as xenacoelomorphs.


Assuntos
Filogenia , Vertebrados , Animais , Anelídeos/anatomia & histologia , Anelídeos/classificação , Invertebrados/anatomia & histologia , Invertebrados/classificação , Modelos Biológicos , Pesquisa , Vertebrados/anatomia & histologia , Vertebrados/classificação
18.
Biol Bull ; 228(1): 13-24, 2015 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25745097

RESUMO

The cephalochordate genera Branchiostoma and Asymmetron diverged during the Mesozoic Era. In spite of the long separation of the parental clades, eggs of the Florida amphioxus, B. floridae, when fertilized with sperm of the Bahamas lancelet, A. lucayanum (and vice versa), develop through embryonic and larval stages. The larvae reach the chordate phylotypic stage (i.e., the pharyngula), characterized by a dorsal nerve cord, notochord, perforate pharynx, and segmented trunk musculature. After about 2 weeks of larval development, the hybrids die, as do the A. lucayanum purebreds, although all were eating the same algal diet that sustains B. floridae purebreds through adulthood in the laboratory; it is thus unclear whether death of the hybrids results from incompatible parental genomes or an inadequate diet. The diploid chromosome count in A. lucayanum and B. floridae purebreds is, respectively, 34 and 38, whereas it is 36 in hybrids in either direction. The hybrid larvae exhibit several morphological characters intermediate between those of the parents, including the size of the preoral ciliated pit and the angles of deflection of the gill slits and anus from the ventral midline. Based on the time since the two parent clades diverged (120 or 160 million years, respectively, by nuclear and mitochondrial gene analysis), the cross between Branchiostoma and Asymmetron is the most extreme example of hybridization that has ever been unequivocally demonstrated among multicellular animals.


Assuntos
Anfioxos/anatomia & histologia , Anfioxos/genética , Animais , Bahamas , Cromossomos/genética , Florida , Hibridização Genética , Anfioxos/embriologia , Anfioxos/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Larva
19.
J Exp Biol ; 218(Pt 4): 637-45, 2015 Feb 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25696827

RESUMO

Understanding the evolution of deuterostome nervous systems has been complicated by the by the ambiguous phylogenetic position of the Xenocoelomorpha (Xenoturbellids, acoel flat worms, nemertodermatids), which has been placed either as basal bilaterians, basal deuterostomes or as a sister group to the hemichordate/echinoderm clade (Ambulacraria), which is a sister group of the Chordata. None of these groups has a single longitudinal nerve cord and a brain. A further complication is that echinoderm nerve cords are not likely to be evolutionarily related to the chordate central nervous system. For hemichordates, opinion is divided as to whether either one or none of the two nerve cords is homologous to the chordate nerve cord. In chordates, opposition by two secreted signaling proteins, bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) and Nodal, regulates partitioning of the ectoderm into central and peripheral nervous systems. Similarly, in echinoderm larvae, opposition between BMP and Nodal positions the ciliary band and regulates its extent. The apparent loss of this opposition in hemichordates is, therefore, compatible with the scenario, suggested by Dawydoff over 65 years ago, that a true centralized nervous system was lost in hemichordates.


Assuntos
Cordados/anatomia & histologia , Equinodermos/anatomia & histologia , Sistema Nervoso/anatomia & histologia , Animais , Evolução Biológica , Cordados/genética , Equinodermos/genética , Expressão Gênica , Larva/anatomia & histologia , Filogenia
20.
J Exp Zool B Mol Dev Evol ; 324(4): 342-52, 2015 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24665055

RESUMO

Morphological comparisons among extant animals have long been used to infer their long-extinct ancestors for which the fossil record is poor or non-existent. For evolution of the vertebrates, the comparison has typically involved amphioxus and vertebrates. Both groups are evolving relatively slowly, and their genomes share a high level of synteny. Both vertebrates and amphioxus have regulative development in which cell fates become fixed only gradually during embryogenesis. Thus, their development fits a modified hourglass model in which constraints are greatest at the phylotypic stage (i.e., the late neurula/early larva), but are somewhat greater on earlier development than on later development. In contrast, the third group of chordates, the tunicates, which are sister group to vertebrates, are evolving rapidly. Constraints on evolution of tunicate genomes are relaxed, and they have discarded key developmental genes and organized much of their coding sequences into operons, which are transcribed as a single mRNA that undergoes trans-splicing. This contrasts with vertebrates and amphioxus, whose genomes are not organized into operons. Concomitantly, tunicates have switched to determinant development with very early fixation of cell fates. Thus, tunicate development more closely fits a progressive divergence model (shaped more like a wine glass than an hourglass) in which the constraints on the zygote and very early development are greatest. This model can help explain why tunicate body plans are so very diverse. The relaxed constraints on development after early cleavage stages are correlated with relaxed constraints on genome evolution. The question remains: which came first?


Assuntos
Anfioxos/embriologia , Anfioxos/genética , Urocordados/embriologia , Urocordados/genética , Animais , Evolução Biológica , Genes Controladores do Desenvolvimento , Genômica
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