Literature DB >> 10101127

A novel ontogenetic pathway in hybrid embryos between species with different modes of development.

E C Raff1, E M Popodi, B J Sly, F R Turner, J T Villinski, R A Raff.   

Abstract

To investigate the bases for evolutionary changes in developmental mode, we fertilized eggs of a direct-developing sea urchin, Heliocidaris erythrogramma, with sperm from a closely related species, H. tuberculata, that undergoes indirect development via a feeding larva. The resulting hybrids completed development to form juvenile adult sea urchins. Hybrids exhibited restoration of feeding larval structures and paternal gene expression that have been lost in the evolution of the direct-developing maternal species. However, the developmental outcome of the hybrids was not a simple reversion to the paternal pluteus larval form. An unexpected result was that the ontogeny of the hybrids was distinct from either parental species. Early hybrid larvae exhibited a novel morphology similar to that of the dipleurula-type larva typical of other classes of echinoderms and considered to represent the ancestral echinoderm larval form. In the hybrid developmental program, therefore, both recent and ancient ancestral features were restored. That is, the hybrids exhibited features of the pluteus larval form that is present in both the paternal species and in the immediate common ancestor of the two species, but they also exhibited general developmental features of very distantly related echinoderms. Thus in the hybrids, the interaction of two genomes that normally encode two disparate developmental modes produces a novel but harmonious ontongeny.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10101127     DOI: 10.1242/dev.126.9.1937

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Development        ISSN: 0950-1991            Impact factor:   6.868


  8 in total

1.  Endogenous thyroid hormone synthesis in facultative planktotrophic larvae of the sand dollar Clypeaster rosaceus: implications for the evolutionary loss of larval feeding.

Authors:  Andreas Heyland; Adam M Reitzel; David A Price; Leonid L Moroz
Journal:  Evol Dev       Date:  2006 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 1.930

2.  Genetic basis for divergence in developmental gene expression in two closely related sea urchins.

Authors:  Lingyu Wang; Jennifer W Israel; Allison Edgar; Rudolf A Raff; Elizabeth C Raff; Maria Byrne; Gregory A Wray
Journal:  Nat Ecol Evol       Date:  2020-04-13       Impact factor: 15.460

3.  Relationships among pest flour beetles of the genus Tribolium (Tenebrionidae) inferred from multiple molecular markers.

Authors:  David R Angelini; Elizabeth L Jockusch
Journal:  Mol Phylogenet Evol       Date:  2007-09-07       Impact factor: 4.286

4.  Patterning mechanisms in the evolution of derived developmental life histories: the role of Wnt signaling in axis formation of the direct-developing sea urchin Heliocidaris erythrogramma.

Authors:  Jeffrey S Kauffman; Rudolf A Raff
Journal:  Dev Genes Evol       Date:  2003-11-15       Impact factor: 0.900

5.  Microbiome reduction and endosymbiont gain from a switch in sea urchin life history.

Authors:  Tyler J Carrier; Brittany A Leigh; Dione J Deaker; Hannah R Devens; Gregory A Wray; Seth R Bordenstein; Maria Byrne; Adam M Reitzel
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2021-04-20       Impact factor: 11.205

6.  Fertilisation and early developmental barriers to hybridisation in field crickets.

Authors:  Frances Tyler; Rolando Rodríguez-Muñoz; Tom Tregenza
Journal:  BMC Evol Biol       Date:  2013-02-15       Impact factor: 3.260

Review 7.  Life cycle evolution: was the eumetazoan ancestor a holopelagic, planktotrophic gastraea?

Authors:  Claus Nielsen
Journal:  BMC Evol Biol       Date:  2013-08-16       Impact factor: 3.260

8.  The developmental transcriptomes of two sea biscuit species with differing larval types.

Authors:  Anne Frances Armstrong; Richard K Grosberg
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2018-05-18       Impact factor: 3.969

  8 in total

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