Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Pregastrular Development of Amphibians: Ontogenetic Diversity and Eco-Devo. / Десницкий, Алексей Григорьевич.
In: Russian Journal of Developmental Biology, Vol. 54, No. 2, 01.04.2023, p. 113-125.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Pregastrular Development of Amphibians: Ontogenetic Diversity and Eco-Devo
AU - Десницкий, Алексей Григорьевич
PY - 2023/4/1
Y1 - 2023/4/1
N2 - Comparative and ecological aspects of the reorganizations of early development in the class Amphibia are analyzed. We used data on the developmental diversity in a number of families belonging to the orders Anura and Caudata, in which many species had lost their connection with the aquatic environment. Model representatives of the class Amphibia (Ambystoma mexicanum, Rana temporaria, and Xenopus laevis) have small eggs (no more than 2.5 mm in diameter). In these species, the slowdown in the rate of cell divisions and the loss of synchrony occur at the midblastula stage. However, phylogenetically basal amphibian species (Ascaphus truei, Cryptobranchus alleganiensis) are characterized by the large (4–6 mm in diameter) yolky eggs and a short series of synchronous blastomere divisions (the synchrony is already lost at the 8-cell stage of cleavage). They do not have a “midblastula transition,” which is characteristic of the above model species. On the other hand, many evolutionarily advanced non-model species of caudate and anuran amphibians (for example, Desmognathus fuscus, Gastrotheca riobambae, Philoria sphagnicolus), as well as the basal species, are characterized by the large, yolk-rich eggs and the early loss of cell division synchrony. Phylogenetic analysis suggests that the cleavage pattern of the most extensively studied amphibians, the Mexican axolotl (Caudata) and the African clawed frog (Anura), represents a homoplasy. The midblastula transition, which is character- istic of these two species, might have evolved convergently in these two orders of amphibians as an embryonic adaptation to development in lentic water
AB - Comparative and ecological aspects of the reorganizations of early development in the class Amphibia are analyzed. We used data on the developmental diversity in a number of families belonging to the orders Anura and Caudata, in which many species had lost their connection with the aquatic environment. Model representatives of the class Amphibia (Ambystoma mexicanum, Rana temporaria, and Xenopus laevis) have small eggs (no more than 2.5 mm in diameter). In these species, the slowdown in the rate of cell divisions and the loss of synchrony occur at the midblastula stage. However, phylogenetically basal amphibian species (Ascaphus truei, Cryptobranchus alleganiensis) are characterized by the large (4–6 mm in diameter) yolky eggs and a short series of synchronous blastomere divisions (the synchrony is already lost at the 8-cell stage of cleavage). They do not have a “midblastula transition,” which is characteristic of the above model species. On the other hand, many evolutionarily advanced non-model species of caudate and anuran amphibians (for example, Desmognathus fuscus, Gastrotheca riobambae, Philoria sphagnicolus), as well as the basal species, are characterized by the large, yolk-rich eggs and the early loss of cell division synchrony. Phylogenetic analysis suggests that the cleavage pattern of the most extensively studied amphibians, the Mexican axolotl (Caudata) and the African clawed frog (Anura), represents a homoplasy. The midblastula transition, which is character- istic of these two species, might have evolved convergently in these two orders of amphibians as an embryonic adaptation to development in lentic water
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/5b7c2b2b-159b-378b-a42a-3ea66a467d0b/
U2 - 10.1134/s1062360423020029
DO - 10.1134/s1062360423020029
M3 - Article
VL - 54
SP - 113
EP - 125
JO - Russian Journal of Developmental Biology
JF - Russian Journal of Developmental Biology
SN - 1062-3604
IS - 2
ER -
ID: 107879060