Literature DB >> 23025614

Violation of Dollo's law: evidence of muscle reversions in primate phylogeny and their implications for the understanding of the ontogeny, evolution, and anatomical variations of modern humans.

Rui Diogo1, Bernard Wood.   

Abstract

According to Dollo's law, once a complex structure is lost it is unlikely to be reacquired. In this article, we report new data obtained from our myology-based cladistic analyses of primate phylogeny, which provide evidence of anatomical reversions violating Dollo's law: of the 220 character state changes unambiguously optimized in the most parsimonious primate tree, 28 (13%) are evolutionary reversions, and of these 28 reversions six (21%) occurred in the nodes that lead to the origin of modern humans; nine (32%) violate Dollo's law. In some of these nine cases, the structures that were lost in adults of the last common ancestor and are absent in adults of most subgroups of a clade are actually present in early ontogenetic stages of karyotypically normal individuals as well as in later ontogenetic stages of karyotypically abnormal members of those subgroups. Violations of Dollo's law may thus result from the maintenance of ancestral developmental pathways during long periods of trait absence preceding the reacquisition of the trait through paedomorphic events. For instance, the presence of contrahentes and intermetacarpales in adult chimpanzees is likely due to a prolonged/delayed development of the hand musculature, that is, in this case chimpanzees are more neotenic than modern humans.
© 2012 The Author(s). Evolution© 2012 The Society for the Study of Evolution.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23025614     DOI: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.2012.01621.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Evolution        ISSN: 0014-3820            Impact factor:   3.694


  6 in total

Review 1.  Social variables exert selective pressures in the evolution and form of primate mimetic musculature.

Authors:  Anne M Burrows; Ly Li; Bridget M Waller; Jerome Micheletta
Journal:  J Anat       Date:  2016-01-11       Impact factor: 2.610

2.  Primate modularity and evolution: first anatomical network analysis of primate head and neck musculoskeletal system.

Authors:  Vance Powell; Borja Esteve-Altava; Julia Molnar; Brian Villmoare; Alesha Pettit; Rui Diogo
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-02-05       Impact factor: 4.379

3.  First use of anatomical networks to study modularity and integration of heads, forelimbs and hindlimbs in abnormal anencephalic and cyclopic vs normal human development.

Authors:  Rui Diogo; Janine M Ziermann; Christopher Smith; Malak Alghamdi; Jose S M Fuentes; Andre Duerinckx
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2019-05-24       Impact factor: 4.379

4.  Anatomical Network Comparison of Human Upper and Lower, Newborn and Adult, and Normal and Abnormal Limbs, with Notes on Development, Pathology and Limb Serial Homology vs. Homoplasy.

Authors:  Rui Diogo; Borja Esteve-Altava; Christopher Smith; Julia C Boughner; Diego Rasskin-Gutman
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-10-09       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  Musculoskeletal study of cebocephalic and cyclopic lamb heads illuminates links between normal and abnormal development, evolution and human pathologies.

Authors:  Rui Diogo; Daria Razmadze; Natalia Siomava; Nora Douglas; Jose S M Fuentes; Andre Duerinckx
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2019-01-30       Impact factor: 4.379

6.  Evidence for the loss and recovery of SLAMF9 during human evolution: implications on Dollo's law.

Authors:  Maegan K Murphy; Justin T Moon; Alexis T Skolaris; Joseph A Mikulin; Timothy J Wilson
Journal:  Immunogenetics       Date:  2021-02-22       Impact factor: 2.846

  6 in total

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