Department of Biology, Syracuse University, 130 College Place, Syracuse, NY 13244, USA.
BMC Biol. 2010 Jan 26;8:8. doi: 10.1186/1741-7007-8-8.
While bilaterality is a defining characteristic of triploblastic animals, several assemblages have managed to break this symmetry in order to exploit the adaptive peaks garnered through the lateralization of behaviour or morphology. One striking example of an evolved asymmetry in vertebrates comes from a group of scale-eating cichlid fishes from Lake Tanganyika. Members of the Perissodini tribe of cichlid fishes have evolved dental and craniofacial asymmetries in order to more effectively remove scales from the left or right flanks of prey. Here we examine the evolution and development of craniofacial morphology and laterality among Lake Tanganyika scale-eating cichlids.
Using both geometric and traditional morphometric methods we found that the craniofacial evolution in the Perissodini involved discrete shifts in skeletal anatomy that reflect differences in habitat preference and predation strategies. Further, we show that the evolutionary history of the Perissodini is characterized by an accentuation of craniofacial laterality such that certain taxa show elaborate sided differences in craniofacial shape consistent with the sub-partitioning of function between sides of the head during attacks. Craniofacial laterality in the scale-eating specialist Perissodus microlepis was found to be evident early in development and exhibited a unimodal distribution, which is contrary to the adult condition where jaw laterality has been described as a discrete, bimodal antisymmetry. Finally, using linkage and association analyses we identified a conserved locus for jaw handedness that segregates among East African cichlids.
We suggest that, during the evolution of the Perissodini, selection has accentuated a latent, genetically determined handedness of the craniofacial skeleton, enabling the evolution of jaw asymmetries in order to increase predation success. Continued work on the developmental genetic basis of laterality in the Perissodini will facilitate a better understanding of the evolution of this unique group of fishes, as well as of left-right axis determination among vertebrates in general.
虽然双侧性是三胚层动物的一个定义特征,但有几个组合设法打破了这种对称性,以利用通过行为或形态的侧化获得的适应峰。脊椎动物中一个明显的不对称进化例子来自坦噶尼喀湖的一组食鳞慈鲷鱼。慈鲷鱼的 Perissodini 部落成员进化出了牙齿和颅面不对称,以便更有效地从猎物的左侧或右侧去除鳞片。在这里,我们研究了坦噶尼喀湖食鳞慈鲷鱼的颅面形态和侧化的进化和发展。
使用几何和传统形态计量学方法,我们发现 Perissodini 的颅面进化涉及骨骼解剖结构的离散变化,这些变化反映了栖息地偏好和捕食策略的差异。此外,我们表明,Perissodini 的进化历史的特点是颅面侧化的强调,以至于某些分类群在颅面形状上表现出精细的侧化差异,与头部两侧在攻击期间功能的细分相对应。食鳞专家 Perissodus microlepis 的颅面侧化在发育早期就很明显,表现出单峰分布,这与成年条件下描述的下颌侧化为离散的双峰反称性相反。最后,使用连锁和关联分析,我们确定了一个用于下颌手性的保守基因座,该基因座在东非慈鲷鱼中分离。
我们认为,在 Perissodini 的进化过程中,选择强调了颅面骨骼的潜在、遗传决定的手性,使颌骨不对称的进化能够提高捕食成功率。对 Perissodini 侧化的发育遗传基础的进一步研究将有助于更好地理解这组独特鱼类的进化,以及脊椎动物中左右轴的确定。