Rose Christopher
Department of Biology, James Madison University, Harrisonburg, VA, USA.
Bioessays. 2009 Mar;31(3):287-99. doi: 10.1002/bies.200800059.
Amphibians that undergo a metamorphosis provide an unparalleled opportunity to investigate how skeletal shape is generated, preserved, and transformed in development. Their pharyngeal arch (PA) cartilages, which support breathing and feeding behaviors, form embryonically from cranial neural crest cells, grow isometrically at larval stages, and abruptly change shape during metamorphosis. Further, the shape changes occur in three different ways: some adult cartilages form de novo, others emerge from within resorbing larval cartilages and some larval cartilages reshape themselves at the cellular level. Isometric growth followed by abrupt shape change is unique to amphibian PA cartilages, which suggests that the origin and evolution of amphibian metamorphosis has been influenced by the tissue properties of cartilage. This essay reviews the functional role of the PA skeleton in frogs and salamanders and presents a mechanistic framework for understanding how its shape is generated, preserved, and transformed at the levels of cell behavior and specification mechanisms.
经历变态发育的两栖动物为研究骨骼形状在发育过程中如何形成、保存和转变提供了无与伦比的机会。它们的咽弓(PA)软骨支撑着呼吸和进食行为,在胚胎期由颅神经嵴细胞形成,在幼体阶段等比例生长,并在变态发育期间突然改变形状。此外,形状变化以三种不同方式发生:一些成体软骨从头形成,另一些从正在吸收的幼体软骨内部出现,还有一些幼体软骨在细胞水平上重塑自身。等比例生长后紧接着形状突然改变是两栖动物PA软骨所特有的,这表明两栖动物变态发育的起源和进化受到软骨组织特性的影响。本文综述了PA骨骼在青蛙和蝾螈中的功能作用,并提出了一个机制框架,以理解其形状在细胞行为和特化机制层面是如何形成、保存和转变的。