Shaping muscle bioarchitecture for the fin to limb transition.

Bioarchitecture Pub Date : 2012-05-01 DOI:10.4161/bioa.20969
Nicholas J Cole, Peter Currie
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Abstract

Our recent paper examined how pelvic fins and their musculature form developmentally and how these mechanisms have evolved within the vertebrate lineage, a process fundamental to the tetrapod transition. The transition from the water onto the land is among one of the most well studied steps in the evolutionary history of vertebrates, yet the genetic basis of this evolutionary transition is little studied and ill-defined. The advent of these terrestrial species resulted in a shift in locomotor strategies from the rhythmic undulating muscles of the fish body to a reliance upon powerful weight bearing muscles of the limbs to generate movement. We demonstrated that the pelvic fin muscles of bony fish are generated by a mechanism that has features of both of limb/fin muscle formation in tetrapods and primitive cartilaginous fish. We hypothesize that the adoption of the fully derived mode of hindlimb muscle formation, was a further modification of the mode of development deployed to generate pelvic fin muscles, a shift in overall muscle bioarchitecture we believe was critical to the success of the tetrapod transition.

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塑造鳍向肢过渡的肌肉生物结构。
我们最近的论文研究了腹鳍和它们的肌肉组织是如何形成发育的,以及这些机制是如何在脊椎动物谱系中进化的,这是四足动物过渡的一个基本过程。从水到陆地的过渡是脊椎动物进化史上研究得最多的步骤之一,然而这种进化过渡的遗传基础研究很少,也不明确。这些陆生物种的出现导致了运动策略的转变,从鱼类身体有节奏的波动肌肉到依赖四肢强大的负重肌肉来产生运动。我们证明了硬骨鱼的骨盆鳍肌肉是由一种具有四足动物和原始软骨鱼四肢/鳍肌肉形成特征的机制产生的。我们假设,采用完全衍生的后肢肌肉形成模式,是对骨盆鳍肌肉发育模式的进一步修改,我们认为这是整体肌肉生物结构的转变,对四足动物的成功过渡至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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