Literature DB >> 29614284

Animal left-right asymmetry.

Martin Blum1, Tim Ott2.   

Abstract

Symmetry is appealing, be it in architecture, art or facial expression, where symmetry is a key feature to finding someone attractive or not. Yet, asymmetries are widespread in nature, not as an erroneous deviation from the norm but as a way to adapt to the prevailing environmental conditions at a time. Asymmetries in many cases are actively selected for: they might well have increased the evolutionary fitness of a species. Even many single-celled organisms are built asymmetrically, such as the pear-shaped ciliate Paramecium, which may depend on its asymmetry to navigate towards the oxygen-richer surface of turbid waters, at least based on modeling. Everybody knows the lobster with its asymmetric pair of claws, the large crusher usually on the left and the smaller cutter on the right. Snail shells coil asymmetrically, as do the organs they house. Organ asymmetries are found throughout the animal kingdom, referring to asymmetric positioning, asymmetric morphology or both, with the vertebrate heart being an example for the latter. Functional asymmetries, such as that of the human brain with its localization of the language center in one hemisphere, add to the complexity of organ asymmetries and presumably played a decisive role for sociocultural evolution. The evolutionary origin of organ asymmetries may have been a longer than body length gut, which allows efficient retrieval of nutrients, and the need to stow a long gut in the body cavity in an orderly manner that ensures optimal functioning. Vertebrate organ asymmetries (situs solitus) are quite sophisticated: in humans, the apex of the asymmetrically built heart points to the left; the lung in turn, due to space restrictions, has fewer lobes on the left than on the right side (two versus three in humans), stomach and spleen are found on the left, the liver on the right, and small and large intestine coil in a chiral manner (Figure 1A). In very rare cases (1:10,000), the organ situs is inverted (situs inversus), while heterotaxia refers to another rare situation (about 1:1,000), in which subsets of organs show normal or aberrant positioning or morphology (Figure 1B). Individuals with situs solitus or situs inversus are healthy, whereas heterotaxia presents severe congenital malformations. Many human syndromes are known in which patients suffer from laterality defects, such as Katagener syndrome, in which the organ situs is inverted in one half of patients and males are sterile. Snail shells and vertebrate organs are examples of biased asymmetries with on average only one inversion in every 10,000 cases. Other asymmetries such as the coiling of the tails of piglets occur randomly with a 50:50 distribution. This primer exclusively deals with organ asymmetries in the animal kingdom, specifically with the mechanisms that ensure the development of biased asymmetries during embryogenesis.
Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 29614284     DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2018.02.073

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Biol        ISSN: 0960-9822            Impact factor:   10.834


  17 in total

1.  Conserved regulation of Nodal-mediated left-right patterning in zebrafish and mouse.

Authors:  Tessa G Montague; James A Gagnon; Alexander F Schier
Journal:  Development       Date:  2018-12-10       Impact factor: 6.868

2.  Light-induced asymmetries in embryonic retinal gene expression are mediated by the vascular system and extracellular matrix.

Authors:  Elisabetta Versace; Paola Sgadò; Julia George; Jasmine L Loveland; Joseph Ward; Peter Thorpe; Lars Juhl Jensen; Karen A Spencer; Silvia Paracchini; Giorgio Vallortigara
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-07-15       Impact factor: 4.996

3.  Discovery of a genetic module essential for assigning left-right asymmetry in humans and ancestral vertebrates.

Authors:  Emmanuelle Szenker-Ravi; Tim Ott; Muznah Khatoo; Anne Moreau de Bellaing; Wei Xuan Goh; Yan Ling Chong; Anja Beckers; Darshini Kannesan; Guillaume Louvel; Priyanka Anujan; Vydianathan Ravi; Carine Bonnard; Sébastien Moutton; Patric Schoen; Mélanie Fradin; Estelle Colin; André Megarbane; Linda Daou; Ghassan Chehab; Sylvie Di Filippo; Caroline Rooryck; Jean-François Deleuze; Anne Boland; Nicolas Arribard; Rukiye Eker; Sumanty Tohari; Alvin Yu-Jin Ng; Marlène Rio; Chun Teck Lim; Birgit Eisenhaber; Frank Eisenhaber; Byrappa Venkatesh; Jeanne Amiel; Hugues Roest Crollius; Christopher T Gordon; Achim Gossler; Sudipto Roy; Tania Attie-Bitach; Martin Blum; Patrice Bouvagnet; Bruno Reversade
Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2021-12-13       Impact factor: 41.307

4.  Altering metabolite distribution at Xenopus cleavage stages affects left-right gene expression asymmetries.

Authors:  Rosemary M Onjiko; Peter Nemes; Sally A Moody
Journal:  Genesis       Date:  2021-04-07       Impact factor: 2.389

5.  Actin cytoskeleton self-organization in single epithelial cells and fibroblasts under isotropic confinement.

Authors:  Salma Jalal; Shidong Shi; Vidhyalakshmi Acharya; Ruby Yun-Ju Huang; Virgile Viasnoff; Alexander D Bershadsky; Yee Han Tee
Journal:  J Cell Sci       Date:  2019-03-07       Impact factor: 5.285

6.  Transient Hemi-paresthesia after Eating Puffer Fish (Fugu): A Case Report.

Authors:  Hiroki Nagasawa; Ikuto Takeuchi; Kei Jitsuiki; Youichi Yanagawa
Journal:  Cureus       Date:  2019-12-30

7.  Prickle isoforms determine handedness of helical morphogenesis.

Authors:  Bomsoo Cho; Song Song; Jeffrey D Axelrod
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2020-01-14       Impact factor: 8.140

8.  Maternal control of visceral asymmetry evolution in Astyanax cavefish.

Authors:  Li Ma; Mandy Ng; Janet Shi; Aniket V Gore; Daniel Castranova; Brant M Weinstein; William R Jeffery
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-05-13       Impact factor: 4.379

9.  Bicc1 and Dicer regulate left-right patterning through post-transcriptional control of the Nodal inhibitor Dand5.

Authors:  Markus Maerker; Maike Getwan; Megan E Dowdle; Jason C McSheene; Vanessa Gonzalez; José L Pelliccia; Danielle S Hamilton; Valeria Yartseva; Charles Vejnar; Melanie Tingler; Katsura Minegishi; Philipp Vick; Antonio J Giraldez; Hiroshi Hamada; Rebecca D Burdine; Michael D Sheets; Martin Blum; Axel Schweickert
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2021-09-16       Impact factor: 14.919

10.  Initial morphological symmetry breaking in the foregut and development of the omental bursa in human embryos.

Authors:  Tobias Schäfer; Viktoria Stankova; Christoph Viebahn; Bernadette de Bakker; Nikoloz Tsikolia
Journal:  J Anat       Date:  2020-11-03       Impact factor: 2.610

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