Literature DB >> 24617986

The development of wing shape in Lepidoptera: mitotic density, not orientation, is the primary determinant of shape.

H Frederik Nijhout1, Margaret Cinderella, Laura W Grunert.   

Abstract

The wings of butterflies and moths develop from imaginal disks whose structure is always congruent with the final adult wing. It is therefore possible to map every point on the imaginal disk to a location on the adult wing throughout ontogeny. We studied the growth patterns of the wings of two distantly related species with very different adult wing shapes, Junonia coenia and Manduca sexta. The shape of the wing disks change throughout their growth phase in a species-specific pattern. We measured mitotic densities and mitotic orientation in successive stages of wing development approximately one cell division apart. Cell proliferation was spatially patterned, and the density of mitoses was highly correlated with local growth. Unlike other systems in which the direction of mitoses has been viewed as the primary determinant of directional growth, we found that in these two species the direction of growth was only weakly correlated with the orientation of mitoses. Directional growth appears to be imposed by a constantly changing spatial pattern of cell division coupled with a weak bias in the orientation of cell division. Because growth and cell division in imaginal disk require ecdysone and insulin signaling, the changing spatial pattern of cell division may due to a changing pattern of expression of receptors or downstream elements in the signaling pathways for one or both of these hormones. Evolution of wing shape comes about by changes in the progression of spatial patterns of cell division.
© 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 24617986     DOI: 10.1111/ede.12065

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Evol Dev        ISSN: 1520-541X            Impact factor:   1.930


  10 in total

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7.  Adaptive developmental plasticity: compartmentalized responses to environmental cues and to corresponding internal signals provide phenotypic flexibility.

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9.  Quantitative Morphological Variation in the Developing Drosophila Wing.

Authors:  Alexis Matamoro-Vidal; Yunxian Huang; Isaac Salazar-Ciudad; Osamu Shimmi; David Houle
Journal:  G3 (Bethesda)       Date:  2018-07-02       Impact factor: 3.154

10.  Evolution of Ovipositor Length in Drosophila suzukii Is Driven by Enhanced Cell Size Expansion and Anisotropic Tissue Reorganization.

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  10 in total

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