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1.
J Hist Biol ; 48(4): 499-537, 2015 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25964144

RESUMO

For over two centuries, the platypus (Ornithorhynchus anatinus) has been constructed and categorized in multiple ways. An unprecedented mélange of anatomical features and physiological functions, it long remained a systematic quandary. Nevertheless, since 1797, naturalists and biologists have pursued two recurring obsessions. Investigations into platypus reproduction and lactation have focused attention largely upon females of the species. Despite its apparent admixture of avian, reptilian and mammalian characters, the platypus was soon placed as a rudimentary mammal--primitive, naïve and harmless. This article pursues a different taxonomic trajectory, concentrating on a specifically male anatomical development: the crural spur and venom gland on the hind legs. Once the defining characteristic of both the platypus and echidna (Tachyglossus aculeatus), by 1830 this sexed spur had been largely dismissed as inactive and irrelevant. For a creature regularly depicted as a biological outlier, the systematic and evolutionary implications of platypus poison have remained largely overlooked. In Australia, however, sporadic cases of 'spiking' led to consistent homologies being remarked between the platypus crural system and the venom glands of snakes. As with its reproductive reliance upon eggs, possession of an endogenous poison suggested significant reptilian affinities, yet the platypus has rarely been classed as an advanced reptile. Indeed, ongoing uncertainty regarding the biological purpose of the male's spur has ostensibly posed a directional puzzle. As with so many of its traits, however, platypus poison has been consistently described as a redundant remnant, rather than an emergent feature indicating evolutionary advance.


Assuntos
Glândulas Exócrinas/anatomia & histologia , Ornitorrinco/anatomia & histologia , Ornitorrinco/classificação , Peçonhas , Animais , Austrália , Evolução Biológica , Classificação , Feminino , História do Século XVIII , História do Século XIX , História do Século XX , Masculino , História Natural/história , Répteis , Tachyglossidae/anatomia & histologia , Tachyglossidae/classificação
3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 106(40): 17089-94, 2009 Oct 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19805098

RESUMO

The semiaquatic platypus and terrestrial echidnas (spiny anteaters) are the only living egg-laying mammals (monotremes). The fossil record has provided few clues as to their origins and the evolution of their ecological specializations; however, recent reassignment of the Early Cretaceous Teinolophos and Steropodon to the platypus lineage implies that platypuses and echidnas diverged >112.5 million years ago, reinforcing the notion of monotremes as living fossils. This placement is based primarily on characters related to a single feature, the enlarged mandibular canal, which supplies blood vessels and dense electrosensory receptors to the platypus bill. Our reevaluation of the morphological data instead groups platypus and echidnas to the exclusion of Teinolophos and Steropodon and suggests that an enlarged mandibular canal is ancestral for monotremes (partly reversed in echidnas, in association with general mandibular reduction). A multigene evaluation of the echidna-platypus divergence using both a relaxed molecular clock and direct fossil calibrations reveals a recent split of 19-48 million years ago. Platypus-like monotremes (Monotrematum) predate this divergence, indicating that echidnas had aquatically foraging ancestors that reinvaded terrestrial ecosystems. This ecological shift and the associated radiation of echidnas represent a recent expansion of niche space despite potential competition from marsupials. Monotremes might have survived the invasion of marsupials into Australasia by exploiting ecological niches in which marsupials are restricted by their reproductive mode. Morphology, ecology, and molecular biology together indicate that Teinolophos and Steropodon are basal monotremes rather than platypus relatives, and that living monotremes are a relatively recent radiation.


Assuntos
Ecologia , Evolução Molecular , Filogenia , Tachyglossidae/genética , Animais , Biodiversidade , Fósseis , Variação Genética , Mutação , Ornitorrinco/anatomia & histologia , Ornitorrinco/classificação , Ornitorrinco/genética , Tachyglossidae/anatomia & histologia , Tachyglossidae/classificação , Fatores de Tempo
4.
Vis Neurosci ; 25(3): 257-64, 2008.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18598396

RESUMO

We have determined the sequence and genomic organization of the genes encoding the cone visual pigment of the platypus (Ornithorhynchus anatinus) and the echidna (Tachyglossus aculeatus), and inferred their spectral properties and evolutionary pathways. We prepared platypus and echidna retinal RNA and used primers of the middle-wave-sensitive (MWS), long-wave-sensitive (LWS), and short-wave sensitive (SWS1) pigments corresponding to coding sequences that are highly conserved among mammals; to PCR amplify the corresponding pigment sequences. Amplification from the retinal RNA revealed the expression of LWS pigment mRNA that is homologous in sequence and spectral properties to the primate LWS visual pigments. However, we were unable to amplify the mammalian SWS1 pigment from these two species, indicating this gene was lost prior to the echidna-platypus divergence (21 MYA). Subsequently, when the platypus genome sequence became available, we found an LWS pigment gene in a conserved genomic arrangement that resembles the primate pigment, but, surprisingly we found an adjacent (20 kb) SWS2 pigment gene within this conserved genomic arrangement. We obtained the same result after sequencing the echidna genes. The encoded SWS2 pigment is predicted to have a wavelength of maximal absorption of about 440 nm, and is paralogous to SWS pigments typically found in reptiles, birds, and fish but not in mammals. This study suggests the locus control region (LCR) has played an important role in the conservation of photo receptor gene arrays and the control of their spatial and temporal expression in the retina in all mammals. In conclusion, a duplication event of an ancestral cone visual pigment gene, followed by sequence divergence and selection gave rise to the LWS and SWS2 visual pigments. So far, the echidna and platypus are the only mammals that share the gene structure of the LWS-SWS2 pigment gene complex with reptiles, birds and fishes.


Assuntos
Ornitorrinco/fisiologia , Células Fotorreceptoras Retinianas Cones/fisiologia , Pigmentos da Retina/fisiologia , Tachyglossidae/fisiologia , Animais , Pegada de DNA , Éxons , Genoma , Genoma Humano , Humanos , Filogenia , Ornitorrinco/classificação , Ornitorrinco/genética , Tachyglossidae/classificação , Tachyglossidae/genética
6.
J Mol Evol ; 54(1): 71-80, 2002 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11734900

RESUMO

The monotremes, the duck-billed platypus and the echidnas, are characterized by a number of unique morphological characteristics, which have led to the common belief that they represent the living survivors of an ancestral stock of mammals. Analysis of new data from the complete mitochondrial (mt) genomes of a second monotreme, the spiny anteater, and another marsupial, the wombat, yielded clear support for the Marsupionta hypothesis. According to this hypothesis marsupials are more closely related to monotremes than to eutherians, consistent with a basal split between eutherians and marsupials/monotremes among extant mammals. This finding was also supported by analysis of new sequences from a nuclear gene--18S rRNA. The mt genome of the wombat shares some unique features with previously described marsupial mtDNAs (tRNA rearrangement, a missing tRNA(Lys), and evidence for RNA editing of the tRNA(Asp)). Molecular estimates of genetic divergence suggest that the divergence between the platypus and the spiny anteater took place approximately 34 million years before present (MYBP), and that between South American and Australian marsupials approximately 72 MYBP.


Assuntos
DNA Mitocondrial/genética , Marsupiais/genética , RNA Ribossômico 18S/genética , Tachyglossidae/genética , Animais , Sequência de Bases , Marsupiais/classificação , Modelos Genéticos , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Filogenia , RNA Ribossômico 18S/classificação , RNA de Transferência/genética , Alinhamento de Sequência , Análise de Sequência de DNA , Tachyglossidae/classificação
7.
Eur J Biochem ; 218(2): 457-61, 1993 Dec 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8269934

RESUMO

The protamine P1 genes from two monotremes, platypus (Ornithorhynchus anatinus) and echidna (Tachyglossus aculeatus) were isolated after polymerase-chain-reaction amplification then cloned and sequenced. The two protamine P1 genes are of 290 bp and 311 bp for platypus and echidna, respectively, and are clearly orthologous to the published sequences of protamine P1 genes of eutherian mammals and birds. Both genes contain an intron, like the mammals and marsupials and unlike the bird P1 genes that are intronless. The deduced protein sequences from the coding areas of the platypus and echidna protamine P1 genes do not contain any cysteine residues. This absence of cysteine residues leaves the sperm nuclei susceptible to disruption in vitro by exposure to increasing ionic strength and is a characteristic of fish, birds and marsupials. In contrast, the P1 protamines of placental mammals invariably contain 6-9 cysteine residues that, as a result of the formation of intermolecular and intramolecular disulfide bridges, significantly increase the stability of the sperm nuclei that can only be disrupted following disulfide-bond cleavage. Phylogenetic analysis of the protamine P1 gene sequences indicates that the monotremes occupy a position half-way between the eutherian mammals and birds. From the DNA sequences we estimate the time of divergence of the platypus and the echidna to be around 22 million years ago. This date agrees very well with the published estimates of divergence based on other criteria.


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Ornitorrinco/genética , Protaminas/genética , Tachyglossidae/genética , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Animais , Sequência de Bases , DNA , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Filogenia , Ornitorrinco/classificação , Homologia de Sequência de Aminoácidos , Homologia de Sequência do Ácido Nucleico , Tachyglossidae/classificação
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