Literature DB >> 33602487

Transitional chordates and vertebrate origins: Tunicates.

Alexander Fodor1, Jiatai Liu1, Lindsay Turner1, Billie J Swalla2.   

Abstract

The Origin of Chordates has fascinated scientists from the time of Charles Darwin's publication "Descent of Man" in 1871. For over 100 years, it was accepted that chordates evolved from tunicates, our sessile invertebrate sister group. However, genomic and embryonic analyses have shown that lancelets have a body plan and genome much more like vertebrates than do tunicates. In 2000, we proposed a worm-like hypothesis of chordate origins, and genomic and embryonic studies in the past 20 years have supported this hypothesis. This hypothesis contends that the deuterostome ancestor was worm-like, with gill slits, very much like a chordate. In contrast, tunicates have a very derived adult body plan that evolved independently. Here, we review the current understanding of deuterostome phylogeny and supporting evidence for the relationships within each phylum. Then we discuss our hypothesis for chordate origins and evidence to support it. We explore some of the evolutionary changes that ascidians have made to their adult body plan and some of the key gene regulatory networks that have been elucidated in Ciona. Finally, we end with insights that we have gained from studying tailless ascidians for the past 30 years. We've found that differentiation genes, at the end of the gene regulatory networks, become pseudogenes and nonfunctional, even though they are still expressed in tailless ascidians. We expect that eventually these pseudogenes will not be expressed and the ascidian larval body plan is abandoned, leaving the embryo to develop directly into an adult.
© 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Keywords:  Ambulacraria; Ascidians; Chordates; Deuterostomes; Echinoderms; Hemichordates; Tunicates

Year:  2020        PMID: 33602487     DOI: 10.1016/bs.ctdb.2020.10.001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Top Dev Biol        ISSN: 0070-2153            Impact factor:   4.897


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