Museum of Comparative Zoology and Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.
Geosciences Program, Queensland Museum, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
Anat Rec (Hoboken). 2024 May;307(5):1764-1825. doi: 10.1002/ar.25312. Epub 2023 Sep 19.
This paper is the first in a two-part series that charts the evolution of appendicular musculature along the mammalian stem lineage, drawing upon the exceptional fossil record of extinct synapsids. Here, attention is focused on muscles of the forelimb. Understanding forelimb muscular anatomy in extinct synapsids, and how this changed on the line to mammals, can provide important perspective for interpreting skeletal and functional evolution in this lineage, and how the diversity of forelimb functions in extant mammals arose. This study surveyed the osteological evidence for muscular attachments in extinct mammalian and nonmammalian synapsids, two extinct amniote outgroups, and a large selection of extant mammals, saurians, and salamanders. Observations were integrated into an explicit phylogenetic framework, comprising 73 character-state complexes covering all muscles crossing the shoulder, elbow, and wrist joints. These were coded for 33 operational taxonomic units spanning >330 Ma of tetrapod evolution, and ancestral state reconstruction was used to evaluate the sequence of muscular evolution along the stem lineage from Amniota to Theria. In addition to producing a comprehensive documentation of osteological evidence for muscle attachments in extinct synapsids, this work has clarified homology hypotheses across disparate taxa and helped resolve competing hypotheses of muscular anatomy in extinct species. The evolutionary history of mammalian forelimb musculature was a complex and nonlinear narrative, punctuated by multiple instances of convergence and concentrated phases of anatomical transformation. More broadly, this study highlights the great insight that a fossil-based perspective can provide for understanding the assembly of novel body plans.
本文是一个两部分系列的第一篇,该系列阐述了附肢肌肉组织沿着哺乳动物谱系的进化过程,参考了已灭绝合弓类动物的特殊化石记录。在这里,我们将重点关注前肢的肌肉。了解已灭绝合弓类动物的前肢肌肉解剖结构,以及其在向哺乳动物进化过程中的变化,可为解释该谱系中的骨骼和功能进化以及现存哺乳动物前肢功能多样性的起源提供重要视角。本研究调查了已灭绝哺乳动物和非哺乳动物合弓类动物、两个已灭绝的羊膜动物外群以及大量现存哺乳动物、爬行动物和蝾螈的肌肉附着的骨骼证据。观察结果被整合到一个明确的系统发育框架中,该框架包括 73 个涵盖所有穿过肩部、肘部和腕关节的肌肉的特征状态复合体。这些特征状态复合体针对跨越 >330 Ma 四足动物进化的 33 个操作分类单位进行了编码,并进行了祖先状态重建,以评估从羊膜动物到真兽类的谱系主干上肌肉进化的顺序。除了全面记录已灭绝合弓类动物肌肉附着的骨骼证据外,这项工作还澄清了不同分类群之间的同源假设,并帮助解决了已灭绝物种中肌肉解剖结构的竞争假设。哺乳动物前肢肌肉组织的进化历史是一个复杂且非线性的故事,其中多次出现趋同现象,并经历了集中的解剖结构转变阶段。更广泛地说,这项研究强调了基于化石的视角可以为理解新身体计划的组合提供的重要见解。