Developmental evidence for serial homology of the vertebrate jaw and gill arch skeleton
Developmental evidence for serial homology of the vertebrate jaw and gill arch skeleton
Date
2012-08
Authors
Gillis, J. Andrew
Modrell, Melinda S.
Baker, Clare V. H.
Modrell, Melinda S.
Baker, Clare V. H.
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Abstract
Gegenbaur’s classical hypothesis of jaw-gill arch serial homology is widely cited, but
remains unsupported by either paleontological evidence (e.g. a series of fossils reflecting
the stepwise transformation of a gill arch into a jaw) or developmental genetic data (e.g.
shared molecular mechanisms underlying segment identity in the mandibular, hyoid
and gill arch endoskeletons). Here, we show that nested expression of Dlx genes – the
“Dlx code” that specifies upper and lower jaw identity in mammals and teleosts – is a
primitive feature of the mandibular, hyoid and gill arches of jawed vertebrates. Using
fate-mapping techniques, we demonstrate that the principal dorsal and ventral
endoskeletal segments of the jaw, hyoid and gill arches of the skate Leucoraja erinacea
derive from molecularly equivalent mesenchymal domains of combinatorial Dlx gene
expression. Our data suggest that vertebrate jaw, hyoid and gill arch cartilages are
serially homologous, and were primitively patterned dorsoventrally by a common Dlx
blueprint.
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Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2012. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Nature Publishing Group for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Nature Communications 4 (2013): 1435, doi:10.1038/ncomms2429.