Tabin C J
Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115.
Development. 1992 Oct;116(2):289-96. doi: 10.1242/dev.116.2.289.
Limb development has long been a model system for studying vertebrate pattern formation. The advent of molecular biology has allowed the identification of some of the key genes that regulate limb morphogenesis. One important class of such genes are the homeobox-containing, or Hox genes. Understanding of the roles these genes play in development additionally provides insights into the evolution of limb pattern. Hox gene expression patterns divide the embryonic limb bud into five sectors along the anterior/posterior axis. The expression of specific Hox genes in each domain specifies the developmental fate of that region. Because there are only five distinct Hox-encoded domains across the limb bud there is a developmental constraint prohibiting the evolution of more than five different types of digits. The expression patterns of Hox genes in modern embryonic limb buds also gives clues to the shape of the ancestral fin field from which the limb evolved, hence elucidating the evolution of the tetrapod limb.
肢体发育长期以来一直是研究脊椎动物模式形成的模型系统。分子生物学的出现使得鉴定一些调节肢体形态发生的关键基因成为可能。这类基因中的一个重要类别是含同源框基因,即Hox基因。了解这些基因在发育过程中所起的作用,还能为肢体模式的进化提供见解。Hox基因表达模式沿着前后轴将胚胎肢体芽分为五个区域。每个区域中特定Hox基因的表达决定了该区域的发育命运。由于整个肢体芽中只有五个不同的Hox编码区域,因此存在一种发育限制,阻止了超过五种不同类型手指的进化。现代胚胎肢体芽中Hox基因的表达模式也为肢体进化而来的祖先鳍域的形状提供了线索,从而阐明了四足动物肢体的进化。