Prokop Jakub, Rosová Kateřina, Krzemińska Ewa, Krzemiński Wiesław, Nel André, Engel Michael S
Department of Zoology, Faculty of Science, Charles University, Viničná 7, CZ-128 00 Praha 2, Czech Republic.
Institute of Systematics and Evolution of Animals, Polish Academy of Sciences, ul. Sławkowska 17, 31-016 Kraków, Poland.
Curr Biol. 2022 Aug 8;32(15):3414-3422.e1. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2022.06.024. Epub 2022 Jun 29.
The Late Paleozoic acquisition of wings in insects represents one of the key steps in arthropod evolution. While the origin of wings has been a contentious matter for nearly two centuries, recent evolutionary developmental studies suggest either the participation of both tergal and pleural tissues in the formation of wings or wings originated from exites of the most proximal leg podite incorporated into the insect body wall. The so-called "dual hypothesis" for wing origins finds support from studies of embryology, evo-devo, and genomics, although the degree of the presumed contribution from tergal and pleural tissues differ. Ohde et al., confirmed a major role for tergal tissue in the formation of the cricket wing and suggested that "wings evolved from the pre-existing lateral terga of a wingless insect ancestor." Additional work has focused on identifying partial serially homologous structures of wings on the prothorax and abdominal segments. Thus, several studies have suggested that the prothoracic horns in scarab beetles, gin traps of tenebrionid and scarab beetle pupae, or abdominal tracheal gills of mayfly larvae evolved from serial homologues of wings. Here, we present critical information from abdominal lateral outgrowths (flaps) of Paleozoic palaeodictyopteran larvae, which show comparable structure to thoracic wings, consisting of cordate lateral outgrowths antero-basally hinged by muscle attachments. These flaps therefore most likely represent wing serial homologues. The presence of these paired outgrowths on abdominal segments I-IX in early diverging Pterygota likely corresponds to crustacean epipods and resembles a hypothesized ancestral body plan of a "protopterygote" model.
昆虫在晚古生代获得翅膀是节肢动物进化的关键步骤之一。虽然翅膀的起源近两个世纪以来一直存在争议,但最近的进化发育研究表明,背板和侧板组织都参与了翅膀的形成,或者翅膀起源于并入昆虫体壁的最近端腿肢节的外长物。尽管背板和侧板组织的假定贡献程度不同,但所谓的翅膀起源“双重假说”得到了胚胎学、进化发育生物学和基因组学研究的支持。Ohde等人证实了背板组织在蟋蟀翅膀形成中的主要作用,并提出“翅膀是从无翅昆虫祖先预先存在的侧背板进化而来的”。其他工作则集中在确定前胸和腹部节段上翅膀的部分系列同源结构。因此,几项研究表明,金龟子的前胸角、拟步甲和金龟子蛹的刺捕器或蜉蝣幼虫的腹部气管鳃是从翅膀的系列同源物进化而来的。在这里,我们展示了来自古生代古网翅目幼虫腹部外侧突出物(瓣片)的关键信息,这些突出物显示出与胸翅相似的结构,由通过肌肉附着在前基部铰接的心形外侧突出物组成。因此,这些瓣片很可能代表翅膀的系列同源物。在早期分化的有翅昆虫的腹部第一至九节上存在这些成对的突出物,可能与甲壳类动物的上肢相对应,并且类似于“原翅类”模型的假设祖先身体结构。