从进化、发育和遗传的角度看肢体异常。

J M Opitz
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在泥盆纪脊椎动物登陆陆地之前,有1亿年的鳍进化历史,从早期的agnathan动物到近端单茎足类骨骼和可能成对的钩足类骨骼的肉肢动物。关于同源性的争论很少[Owen, 1837; See Desmond, 1982;欧文,1849年的一般性讨论见Roth, 1988]将这三种骨头与包括鸟类和哺乳动物在内的陆地脊椎动物的相应骨头相比较;或者,在这种情况下,同源性的概念可以被安全地解释为结构上的“同一性”,因为它们来自一个具有原型发育计划的共同祖先,而不考虑相应的神经支配椎节[qv Roth, 1988]。在所有四足动物类别中,包括大约4500种现存的哺乳动物,这种非常保守的身体计划表明,早期成功的选择、适应和发育限制的出现,确保了近端-远端表形事件的“适当”继承,以及自足动物的结构和功能完整性。与大多数其他灵长类动物相比,人类的自足是四足动物肢体中变化最大的部分,除了使用拇指外,几乎没有改变其最一般的形式[Ankel-Simons, 1983]。毫无疑问,在胚胎发育的后期阶段,肢体是作为一个预先形成的单一形态发生场而出现的,从侧板(和体质体)中胚层和上覆的外胚层组织起来,形成一个由外胚层覆盖的中胚层核心、远端顶端外胚层脊和后极化活动区组成的单一、原位发育反应系统。这一论断基于两方面的证据。首先,实验结果(从1918年的Harrison和Detweiler开始)几乎立即被认为证明了在迄今为止研究的所有脊椎动物中具有相同形态发生反应电位的“等势”场,而不是对称的。人们很想说,这些形态学结果和解释已经被最近的分子工作“胜利地”证实了。其次,从沙利度胺开始的临床见解,然后借鉴了肩面肌功能障碍,其关联(VATER),并发现了人类肩肾多变性的缺陷,这在Lash和Geduspan和Solursh的工作中得到了解释(可能涉及单个分子,即胰岛素样生长因子- 1)。很明显,在随后的正常肢体发育中建立的大体形态模式是近端-远端分层的(或至少是顺序的),并且复杂的次级(表形)场群(通过孟德尔突变分析可能多达33个)是在肢体单个组织成分的细胞分化之前确定的。在肢体萌芽中,Anikin[1929]的不稳定凝结、分裂和分支模式,虽然涉及到一种特定类型的细胞(不稳定间质)与细胞外基质的复杂相互作用,但必须主要被视为总体形态发生场事件,而不是严格意义上的“精细”组织分化。鉴于临床证据,Shubin-Alberch-Oster(预)软骨事件(凝聚、分割和分支)模型虽然普遍有效,但最好被视为具有形态发生潜力的事件,而不是最终结构的不变预测因素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Limb anomalies from evolutionary, developmental, and genetic perspectives.

Coming-on-land by vertebrates during the Devonian was preceded by a 100 million year history of evolution of fins from an early agnathan to a sarcopterygian state with proximal single stylopod bone and probable paired zeugopod bones. There is little disagreement about the homology [Owen, 1837: See Desmond, 1982; Owen, 1849 for a general discussion see Roth, 1988] of these three bones to the corresponding ones of present land vertebrates including those of birds and mammals; or, that the concept of homology in this context may safely be interpreted as meaning structural "identity" by virtue of descent from a common ancestor with a prototypic developmental plan irregardless of the corresponding innervating vertebral segments [qv Roth, 1988]. This extraordinarily conserved body plan in all four classes of tetrapods, including some 4500 living species of mammals, suggests early successful selection, adaptation, and emergence of developmental constraints assuring "proper" succession of proximo-distal epimorphic events and the structural and functional integrity of the autopod. The autopod is the most variable part of the tetrapod limb with humans, in contract to most other primates, retaining its most general form with little modification except for use of the thumb [Ankel-Simons, 1983]. There is also no question about the fact that during the later stages of blastogenesis the limb arises as a prepatterned single morphogenetic field from lateral plate (and somite) mesoderm and overlying ectoderm organizing in concert a single, orthotopic developmentally reactive system of ectoderm-covered mesodermal core with distal apical ectodermal ridge and posterior zone of polarizing activity. This assertion is based on two lines of evidence. First, experimental results [beginning with Harrison and Detweiler in 1918] recognized almost immediately as demonstrating not symmetrical, but "equipotential" fields with identical morphogenetic reaction potential in all vertebrates studied so far. One is tempted to say that these morphological results and interpretations have been, "triumphantly" confirmed by recent molecular work. Second, clinical insights beginning with thalidomide, and then drawing on the acrofacial dysostoses, the associations (VATER), and the discovery of the acrorenal polytopic field defect in humans, which found its explanation in the work of Lash and of Geduspan and Solursh (possibly involving a single molecule, namely, the insulin-like growth factor-I). It is evident that the gross morphological pattern set up in subsequent normal limb development is proximo-distally hierarchical (or at least sequential), and that the complex group of secondary (epimorphic) fields (perhaps as many as 33 as identified by analysis of mendelian mutations) is determined before cellular differentiation of the individual tissue components of the limb. The Anikin [1929] patterns of precartilage condensations, segmentations, and branchings in limb rudiments, while involving a specific type of cell (precartilage mesenchyme) in complex interaction with the extracellular matrix, must be looked at primarily as gross morphogenetic field events rather than as "fine" tissue differentiation sensu stricto. In view of the clinical evidence, the Shubin-Alberch-Oster model of (pre) cartilage events (condensation, segmentation, and branching), while universally valid as such, had best be regarded as events with morphogenetic potential rather than as invariable predictors of final structure.

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