Rose Christopher S, Murawinski Danny, Horne Virginia
Department of Biology, James Madison University, Harrisonburg, VA, USA.
J Anat. 2015 Jun;226(6):575-95. doi: 10.1111/joa.12303. Epub 2015 Apr 25.
Understanding skeletal diversification involves knowing not only how skeletal rudiments are shaped embryonically, but also how skeletal shape changes throughout life. The pharyngeal arch (PA) skeleton of metamorphosing amphibians persists largely as cartilage and undergoes two phases of development (embryogenesis and metamorphosis) and two phases of growth (larval and post-metamorphic). Though embryogenesis and metamorphosis produce species-specific features of PA cartilage shape, the extents to which shape and size change during growth and metamorphosis remain unaddressed. This study uses allometric equations and thin-plate spline, relative warp and elliptic Fourier analyses to describe shape and size trajectories for the ventral PA cartilages of the frog Xenopus laevis in tadpole and frog growth and metamorphosis. Cartilage sizes scale negatively with body size in both growth phases and cartilage shapes scale isometrically or close to it. This implies that most species-specific aspects of cartilage shape arise in embryogenesis and metamorphosis. Contributions from growth are limited to minor changes in lower jaw (LJ) curvature that produce relative gape narrowing and widening in tadpoles and frogs, respectively, and most cartilages becoming relatively thinner. Metamorphosis involves previously unreported decreases in cartilage size as well as changes in cartilage shape. The LJ becomes slightly longer, narrower and more curved, and the adult ceratohyal emerges from deep within the resorbing tadpole ceratohyal. This contrast in shape and size changes suggests a fundamental difference in the underlying cellular pathways. The observation that variation in PA cartilage shape decreases with tadpole growth supports the hypothesis that isometric growth is required for the metamorphic remodeling of PA cartilages. It also supports the existence of shape-regulating mechanisms that are specific to PA cartilages and that resist local adaptation and phenotypic plasticity.
理解骨骼多样化不仅需要了解骨骼原基在胚胎期是如何形成的,还需要了解骨骼形状在整个生命过程中是如何变化的。变态期两栖动物的咽弓(PA)骨骼主要以软骨形式保留,并经历两个发育阶段(胚胎发生和变态)以及两个生长阶段(幼体和变态后)。虽然胚胎发生和变态产生了PA软骨形状的物种特异性特征,但在生长和变态过程中形状和大小变化的程度仍未得到解决。本研究使用异速生长方程、薄板样条、相对扭曲和椭圆傅里叶分析来描述非洲爪蟾蝌蚪和青蛙生长及变态过程中腹侧PA软骨的形状和大小轨迹。在两个生长阶段,软骨大小与身体大小呈负相关,软骨形状呈等比例缩放或接近等比例缩放。这意味着软骨形状的大多数物种特异性方面出现在胚胎发生和变态过程中。生长的贡献仅限于下颌(LJ)曲率的微小变化,分别导致蝌蚪和青蛙的相对口裂变窄和变宽,以及大多数软骨变得相对更薄。变态涉及以前未报道的软骨大小减小以及软骨形状的变化。LJ变得稍长、稍窄且更弯曲,成年角舌骨从正在吸收的蝌蚪角舌骨深处出现。这种形状和大小变化的对比表明潜在细胞途径存在根本差异。PA软骨形状变化随蝌蚪生长而减小的观察结果支持了这样的假设,即PA软骨的变态重塑需要等比例生长。它还支持存在特定于PA软骨的形状调节机制,这些机制抵抗局部适应和表型可塑性。