Lecture 06: EvoDevo Flashcards
Evolutionary Developmental Biology -> seeks to understand the mechanisms by wich development has evolved
Three Enigmas
Enigma 1: Common ancestry of very different organisms
* macroevolution
* “major transitions”
Enigma 2: Phenotypic differences with almost identical genomes
* Chimpanzee sequencing shows more then 80% (paper: 95%) of the base pairs are exactly shared between chimpanzee and human DNA
Enigma 3: Evolutionary reversals of complex characters
* Example: second Molar (M2) lost in evolution of Felidae, but comes back in 10% of Lynx population.
(90% of Lynx and all Ocelot -> M1
Common ancestor of Felidae and Civet -> M2)
Universality of developmental systems: Hox gene Evolution
Hox gene
- responsible for the pattern of the body -> regionalization genes
- set of genes patterning the antero-posterior body axis
- organization in chromosomal
complexes, (as four clusters in mammals)
in spatial and temporal colinearity
(5’ equals posterior, 3’ equals anterior) - first discovered in Drosophila melanogaster, (where they are secondarily split into 2 clusters, the Antennapedia complex and the Bithorax complex.)
- Vertebrates (e.g. mice, humans), on the other hand, usually have 4 Hox clusters, which are probably the result of a double duplication of the genome
- The identity of structures is determined by the Hox code,
-> in Drosophila for example the identity of the segments (e.g. the expression of Ubx determines the identity of the 3rd thorax segment [homeotic mutant]. )
-> In vertebrates e.g.the identity of the vertebrae along the spinal column (homeosis).
Ubx and wing morphology
- Hox gene expression in Drosophila -> in Diptera: normally only forewings & halterer
- In larvae Ubx expression shows that third hypothesis is right, because Ubx is in the same region (between T2/T3) -> Ubx determines the identity of the 3rd thorax segment
- Ubx expression in adult insect
Control: normal pattern (fore/hind wing diff)
Ubx suppressed: forewing pattern in hindwing - Ubx regulates different target genes -> from ancestral insect with hindwing, to Dipteran halterer and Lepidopteran hindwing
Example Enigma 3
Salamanders with direct development vs. biphasic life cycle
- Plethodontidae (lungless salamanders): Direct development evolved independently at least twice
In Desmognathines: direct development was lost and the aquatic larval stage re-appeared
Neoteny (juvenilization): is the delaying or slowing down of the physiological, or somatic development of an organism e.g. Axolotl (verlbleiben im Larvenstadium)
Enigma 3: Reversal evolution
EvoDevo def.
The field of Evo Devo seeks to understand the mechanisms by which development has evolved.
Evo-Devo stands for evolutionary developmental biology
- it compares the developmental processes of different organisms to understand how developmental processes evolved
- this may help to understand how the broad diversity of organisms we know today could evolved and explain the common ancestry of very different organisms
e.g evolution of Hox- genes cluster in different organisms etc.