Developmental evolution of the distal ankle in the dinosaur–bird transition

Author(s):  
Luis Ossa‐Fuentes ◽  
Sergio Soto‐Acuña ◽  
Paula Bona ◽  
Michel Sallaberry ◽  
Alexander O. Vargas
Author(s):  
Manfred D. Laubichler ◽  
Jane Maienschein

2013 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 19-24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nathalie Goemans ◽  
Katrijn Klingels ◽  
Marleen van den Hauwe ◽  
Anneleen Van Orshoven ◽  
Sofie Vanpraet ◽  
...  

Development ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 117 (3) ◽  
pp. 1153-1161
Author(s):  
C. Cognard ◽  
B. Constantin ◽  
M. Rivet-Bastide ◽  
N. Imbert ◽  
C. Besse ◽  
...  

Primary cultures from enzymatically dissociated satellite cells of newborn rat skeletal muscles enabled developmental in vitro studies of mechanical and electrical properties during the first steps of myogenesis. The present work focused on the appearance, evolution and roles of two types of calcium currents (ICa,T and ICa,L) and of depolarization-induced contractile activity during the early stages of muscle cell development in primary culture. Prefusional mononucleated cells (myoblasts), young myotubes of 1 day (with less than 10 nuclei) or 2–3 days (more than 9 nuclei) and myoballs from 4–6, 7–9, 10–12 and 13–16 days cultures were patch-clamped (whole-cell configuration), and calcium currents and contraction simultaneously recorded. Sodium but not calcium currents could be recorded at the myoblast stage. In young myotubes (1 day), ICa,L was present with high incidence as compared to ICa,T, which was poorly expressed. Contractile responses appeared at the next stage (2-3 days) while the occurrence of ICa,T progressively increased. This developmental evolution of the calcium currents and contraction expression was accompanied by some changes in their characteristics: the ICa,T/ICa,L amplitudes ratio progressively increased and the time-to-peak of contraction progressively decreased with the age of myoballs. Physiological functions for calcium currents in developing muscle are suggested and discussed: ICa,T, which is transiently expressed, could be involved in the pacemaker-like activity while ICa,L could serve as an early contraction triggering mechanism and/or initially to fill and then to maintain the intracellular calcium stores.


2019 ◽  
Vol 36 (7) ◽  
pp. 1373-1383 ◽  
Author(s):  
Longjun Wu ◽  
Kailey E Ferger ◽  
J David Lambert

Abstract It has been proposed that animals have a pattern of developmental evolution resembling an hourglass because the most conserved development stage—often called the phylotypic stage—is always in midembryonic development. Although the topic has been debated for decades, recent studies using molecular data such as RNA-seq gene expression data sets have largely supported the existence of periods of relative evolutionary conservation in middevelopment, consistent with the phylotypic stage and the hourglass concepts. However, so far this approach has only been applied to a limited number of taxa across the tree of life. Here, using established phylotranscriptomic approaches, we found a surprising reverse hourglass pattern in two molluscs and a polychaete annelid, representatives of the Spiralia, an understudied group that contains a large fraction of metazoan body plan diversity. These results suggest that spiralians have a divergent midembryonic stage, with more conserved early and late development, which is the inverse of the pattern seen in almost all other organisms where these phylotranscriptomic approaches have been reported. We discuss our findings in light of proposed reasons for the phylotypic stage and hourglass model in other systems.


2012 ◽  
pp. 319-334
Author(s):  
Renee Hetherington ◽  
Robert G. B. Reid

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