Literature DB >> 21557469

Animal egg as evolutionary innovation: a solution to the "embryonic hourglass" puzzle.

Stuart A Newman1.   

Abstract

The evolutionary origin of the egg stage of animal development presents several difficulties for conventional developmental and evolutionary narratives. If the egg's internal organization represents a template for key features of the developed organism, why can taxa within a given phylum exhibit very different egg types, pass through a common intermediate morphology (the so-called "phylotypic stage"), only to diverge again, thus exemplifying the embryonic "hourglass"? Moreover, if different egg types typically represent adaptations to different environmental conditions, why do birds and mammals, for example, have such vastly different eggs with respect to size, shape, and postfertilization dynamics, whereas all these features are more similar for ascidians and mammals? Here, I consider the possibility that different body plans had their origin in self-organizing physical processes in ancient clusters of cells, and suggest that eggs represented a set of independent evolutionary innovations subsequently inserted into the developmental trajectories of such aggregates. I first describe how "dynamical patterning modules" (DPMs) associations between components of the metazoan developmental-genetic toolkit and certain physical processes and effects may have organized primitive animal body plans independently of an egg stage. Next, I describe how adaptive specialization of cells released from such aggregates could have become "proto-eggs," which regenerated the parental cell clusters by cleavage, conserving the characteristic DPMs available to a lineage. Then, I show how known processes of cytoplasmic reorganization following fertilization are often based on spontaneous, self-organizing physical effects ("egg-patterning processes": EPPs). I suggest that rather than acting as developmental blueprints or prepatterns, the EPPs refine the phylotypic body plans determined by the DPMs by setting the boundary and initial conditions under which these multicellular patterning mechanisms operate. Finally, I describe how this new perspective provides a resolution to the embryonic hourglass puzzle.
Copyright © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21557469     DOI: 10.1002/jez.b.21417

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Exp Zool B Mol Dev Evol        ISSN: 1552-5007            Impact factor:   2.656


  7 in total

Review 1.  In the beginning: egg-microbe interactions and consequences for animal hosts.

Authors:  Spencer V Nyholm
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2020-08-10       Impact factor: 6.237

2.  Biphasic patterns of diversification and the emergence of modules.

Authors:  Jay Mittenthal; Derek Caetano-Anollés; Gustavo Caetano-Anollés
Journal:  Front Genet       Date:  2012-08-07       Impact factor: 4.599

3.  Cortical cytasters: a highly conserved developmental trait of Bilateria with similarities to Ctenophora.

Authors:  Miguel Salinas-Saavedra; Alexander O Vargas
Journal:  Evodevo       Date:  2011-12-01       Impact factor: 2.250

Review 4.  The Ground Zero of Organismal Life and Aging.

Authors:  Vadim N Gladyshev
Journal:  Trends Mol Med       Date:  2020-09-23       Impact factor: 15.272

5.  Universal Grammar and Biological Variation: An EvoDevo Agenda for Comparative Biolinguistics.

Authors:  Antonio Benítez-Burraco; Cedric Boeckx
Journal:  Biol Theory       Date:  2014-03-15

6.  Does resource availability help determine the evolutionary route to multicellularity?

Authors:  Olivier Hamant; Ramray Bhat; Vidyanand Nanjundiah; Stuart A Newman
Journal:  Evol Dev       Date:  2019-03-25       Impact factor: 1.930

7.  Phenotypic Novelty in EvoDevo: The Distinction Between Continuous and Discontinuous Variation and Its Importance in Evolutionary Theory.

Authors:  Tim Peterson; Gerd B Müller
Journal:  Evol Biol       Date:  2016-04-28       Impact factor: 3.119

  7 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.