Bowsher Julia H, Nijhout H Frederik
Department of Biology, Box 90338, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708, USA.
Evol Dev. 2007 Jul-Aug;9(4):347-54. doi: 10.1111/j.1525-142X.2007.00171.x.
Abdominal appendages in male sepsid flies are a complex novel structure of unknown developmental and evolutionary origin. Although these abdominal appendages superficially resemble serially homologous insect appendages, they do not develop from imaginal discs like other dipteran appendages. Cauterization of the genital disc and ventral abdominal histoblasts in Themira biloba (Sepsidae, Diptera) revealed that these abdominal appendages develop from the ventral histoblast nests of the fourth abdominal segment. Cell counts of the histoblasts in males and females revealed that the ventral histoblast nests on the fourth abdominal segment in males were significantly larger than other histoblast nests, indicating that the specification of that segment as the location of the abdominal appendages occurs before the last larval instar. The recruitment of histoblasts to produce appendages has not been documented before, and implies a developmental and evolutionary potential for histoblasts that was previously unknown.
雄性腐蝇的腹部附肢是一种复杂的新型结构,其发育和进化起源不明。尽管这些腹部附肢表面上类似于昆虫的系列同源附肢,但它们并非像其他双翅目附肢那样由成虫盘发育而来。对双叶塞氏蝇(塞氏蝇科,双翅目)的生殖盘和腹部腹侧组织芽进行烧灼后发现,这些腹部附肢由第四腹节的腹侧组织芽巢发育而来。对雄性和雌性组织芽的细胞计数显示,雄性第四腹节的腹侧组织芽巢明显大于其他组织芽巢,这表明该节段被指定为腹部附肢的位置发生在最后一龄幼虫之前。此前尚未有关于组织芽被募集以产生附肢的记录,这意味着组织芽具有一种此前未知的发育和进化潜力。