| Literature DB >> 33648627 |
Jordi Estefa1, Paul Tafforeau2, Alice M Clement3, Jozef Klembara4, Grzegorz Niedźwiedzki1, Camille Berruyer2, Sophie Sanchez1,2.
Abstract
The production of blood cells (haematopoiesis) occurs in the limb bones of most tetrapods but is absent in the fin bones of ray-finned fish. When did long bones start producing blood cells? Recent hypotheses suggested that haematopoiesis migrated into long bones prior to the water-to-land transition and protected newly-produced blood cells from harsher environmental conditions. However, little fossil evidence to support these hypotheses has been provided so far. Observations of the humeral microarchitecture of stem-tetrapods, batrachians, and amniotes were performed using classical sectioning and three-dimensional synchrotron virtual histology. They show that Permian tetrapods seem to be among the first to exhibit a centralised marrow organisation, which allows haematopoiesis as in extant amniotes. Not only does our study demonstrate that long-bone haematopoiesis was probably not an exaptation to the water-to-land transition but it sheds light on the early evolution of limb-bone development and the sequence of bone-marrow functional acquisitions.Entities:
Keywords: amphibians; evolutionary biology; haematopoiesis; propagation phase-contrast synchrotron microtomography; stem amniotes; tetrapod terrestrialisation; three-dimensional virtual palaeohistology
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33648627 PMCID: PMC7924947 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.51581
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.140