Equipe Ontogenèse et Cellules Souches du Tégument, Centre de Recherche INSERM UJF - U, Institut Albert Bonniot, Site Santé- La Tronche, Grenoble, France.
J Anat. 2009 Apr;214(4):587-606. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-7580.2008.01041.x.
In zoology it is well known that birds are characterized by the presence of feathers, and mammals by hairs. Another common point of view is that avian scales are directly related to reptilian scales. As a skin embryologist, I have been fascinated by the problem of regionalization of skin appendages in amniotes throughout my scientific life. Here I have collected the arguments that result from classical experimental embryology, from the modern molecular biology era, and from the recent discovery of new fossils. These arguments shape my view that avian ectoderm is primarily programmed toward forming feathers, and mammalian ectoderm toward forming hairs. The other ectoderm derivatives - scales in birds, glands in mammals, or cornea in both classes - can become feathers or hairs through metaplastic process, and appear to have a negative regulatory mechanism over this basic program. How this program is altered remains, in most part, to be determined. However, it is clear that the regulation of the Wnt/beta-catenin pathway is a critical hub. The level of beta-catenin is crucial for feather and hair formation, as its down-regulation appears to be linked with the formation of avian scales in chick, and cutaneous glands in mice. Furthermore, its inhibition leads to the formation of nude skin and is required for that of corneal epithelium. Here I propose a new theory, to be further considered and tested when we have new information from genomic studies. With this theory, I suggest that the alpha-keratinized hairs from living synapsids may have evolved from the hypothetical glandular integument of the first amniotes, which may have presented similarities with common day terrestrial amphibians. Concerning feathers, they may have evolved independently of squamate scales, each originating from the hypothetical roughened beta-keratinized integument of the first sauropsids. The avian overlapping scales, which cover the feet in some bird species, may have developed later in evolution, being secondarily derived from feathers.
在动物学中,人们熟知鸟类的特征是具有羽毛,而哺乳动物的特征是具有毛发。另一个普遍的观点是,鸟类的鳞片与爬行动物的鳞片直接相关。作为一名皮肤胚胎学家,我毕生都对羊膜动物皮肤附属物的区域化问题着迷。在这里,我收集了来自经典实验胚胎学、现代分子生物学时代以及最近新化石发现的论据。这些论据构成了我的观点,即鸟类的外胚层主要被编程为形成羽毛,而哺乳动物的外胚层主要被编程为形成毛发。其他外胚层衍生物——鸟类的鳞片、哺乳动物的腺体或这两类动物的角膜——可以通过变形过程变成羽毛或毛发,并且似乎对这个基本程序具有负调节机制。这个程序是如何被改变的,在很大程度上仍有待确定。然而,很明显,Wnt/β-连环蛋白途径的调节是一个关键的枢纽。β-连环蛋白的水平对于羽毛和毛发的形成至关重要,因为其下调似乎与鸡的鸟类鳞片的形成以及小鼠的皮肤腺体的形成有关。此外,其抑制作用导致裸体皮肤的形成,并且对于角膜上皮的形成是必需的。在这里,我提出了一个新的理论,当我们从基因组研究中获得新的信息时,这个理论需要进一步考虑和测试。有了这个理论,我建议,生活中的合弓类动物的α-角蛋白化毛发可能是从第一羊膜动物的假设腺状表皮进化而来的,它可能与常见的陆地两栖动物有相似之处。至于羽毛,它们可能是独立于鳞片状鳞片进化而来的,每个鳞片都源自第一蜥形类动物的假设粗糙β-角蛋白化表皮。鸟类的重叠鳞片,在某些鸟类物种中覆盖脚部,可能是在进化后期发展起来的,是从羽毛衍生而来的。