Unlabelled: The mechanosensory lateral line system of aquatic vertebrates comprises a superficial network of distributed sensory organs, the neuromasts, which are arranged over the head and trunk and innervated by lateral line nerves to allow detection of changes in water flow and pressure. While the well-studied zebrafish posterior lateral line has emerged as a powerful model to study collective cell migration, far less is known about development of the anterior lateral line, which produces the supraorbital and infraorbital lines around the eye, as well as mandibular and opercular lines over the jaw and cheek. Here we show that normal development of the zebrafish anterior lateral line system from cranial placodes is dependent on another vertebrate-specific cell type, the cranial neural crest.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe investigate the photoinduced dissociation reaction of NO → NO + O upon electronic excitation of the X̃A (D) to the ÃB (D) state by femtosecond X-ray absorption spectroscopy at the nitrogen K-edge. We obtain key insight into the chemical bond breaking event and its associated electronic structural dynamics. Calculations of the photoinduced reaction allow to assign the transient absorption features at time scales of 10-50 fs to wave packet motions in the excited D and ground D states, followed by the formation of the NO photoproduct with a 255 ± 23 fs time constant.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhotodissociation of ironpentacarbonyl [Fe(CO)] in solution generates transient species in different electronic states, which we studied theoretically. From ab initio molecular dynamics simulations in ethanol solution, the closed-shell parent compound Fe(CO) is found to interact weakly with the solvent, whereas the irontetracarbonyl [Fe(CO)] species, formed after photodissociation, has a strongly spin-dependent behavior. It coordinates a solvent molecule tightly in the singlet state [Fe(CO)] and weakly in the triplet state [Fe(CO)].
View Article and Find Full Text PDFC-H bond activation reactions with transition metals typically proceed via the formation of alkane σ-complexes, where an alkane C-H σ-bond binds to the metal. Due to the weak nature of metal-alkane bonds, σ-complexes are challenging to characterize experimentally. Here, we establish the complete pathways of photochemical formation of the model σ-complex Cr(CO)-alkane from Cr(CO) in octane solution and characterize the nature of its metal-ligand bonding interactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhotochemically prepared transition-metal complexes are known to be effective at cleaving the strong C-H bonds of organic molecules in room temperature solutions. There is also ample theoretical evidence that the two-way, metal to ligand (MLCT) and ligand to metal (LMCT), charge-transfer between an incoming alkane C-H group and the transition metal is the decisive interaction in the C-H activation reaction. What is missing, however, are experimental methods to directly probe these interactions in order to reveal what determines reactivity of intermediates and the rate of the reaction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChondrichthyes (sharks, rays, ratfish and their extinct relatives) originated and diversified in the Palaeozoic but are rarely preserved as articulated or partly articulated remains because of their predominantly cartilaginous endoskeletons. Consequently, their evolutionary history is perceived to be documented predominantly by isolated teeth, scales and fin spines. Here, we aim to capture and analyse the quality of the Palaeozoic chondrichthyan fossil record by using a variation of the skeletal completeness metric, which calculates how complete the skeletons of individuals are compared to estimates of their original entirety.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFmolecular dynamics (AIMD) simulations of the aqueous [Fe(HO)(NO)] "brown-ring" complex in different spin states, in combination with multiconfigurational quantum chemical calculations, show a structural dependence on the electronic character of the complex. Sampling in the quartet and sextet ground states show that the multiplicity is correlated with the Fe-N distance. This provides a motivation for a rigid Fe-N scan in the isolated "brown-ring" complex to investigate how the multiconfigurational wave function and the electron density change around the FeNO moiety.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTransition metal reactivity toward carbon-hydrogen (C-H) bonds hinges on the interplay of electron donation and withdrawal at the metal center. Manipulating this reactivity in a controlled way is difficult because the hypothesized metal-alkane charge-transfer interactions are challenging to access experimentally. Using time-resolved x-ray spectroscopy, we track the charge-transfer interactions during C-H activation of octane by a cyclopentadienyl rhodium carbonyl complex.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: Throughout the Silurian and Devonian, cartilaginous fish successively evolved their specialized skeletal and dental characteristics, and increasingly refined their sensory systems. The Late Devonian shark taxon gen. et sp.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain anatomy provides key evidence for the relationships between ray-finned fishes, but two major limitations obscure our understanding of neuroanatomical evolution in this major vertebrate group. First, the deepest branching living lineages are separated from the group's common ancestor by hundreds of millions of years, with indications that aspects of their brain morphology-like other aspects of their anatomy-are specialized relative to primitive conditions. Second, there are no direct constraints on brain morphology in the earliest ray-finned fishes beyond the coarse picture provided by cranial endocasts: natural or virtual infillings of void spaces within the skull.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe chemistry of the brown-ring test has been investigated for nearly a century. Though recent studies have focused on solid state structure determination and measurement of spectra, mechanistic details and kinetics, the aspects of solution structure and dynamics remain unknown. We have studied structural fluctuations of the brown-ring complex in aqueous solution with ab-initio molecular dynamics simulations, from which we identified that the classically established pseudo-octahedral [Fe(H O) (NO)] complex is present along with a square-pyramidal [Fe(H O) (NO)] complex.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEarly excited state dynamics in the photodissociation of transition metal carbonyls determines the chemical nature of short-lived catalytically active reaction intermediates. However, time-resolved experiments have not yet revealed mechanistic details in the sub-picosecond regime. Hence, in this study the photoexcitation of ironpentacarbonyl Fe(CO) is simulated with semi-classical excited state molecular dynamics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAmmocoetes-the filter-feeding larvae of modern lampreys-have long influenced hypotheses of vertebrate ancestry. The life history of modern lampreys, which develop from a superficially amphioxus-like ammocoete to a specialized predatory adult, appears to recapitulate widely accepted scenarios of vertebrate origin. However, no direct evidence has validated the evolutionary antiquity of ammocoetes, and their status as models of primitive vertebrate anatomy is uncertain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Palaeozoic record of chondrichthyans (sharks, rays, chimaeras, extinct relatives) and thus our knowledge of their anatomy and functional morphology is poor because of their predominantly cartilaginous skeletons. Here, we report a previously undescribed symmoriiform shark, Ferromirum oukherbouchi, from the Late Devonian of the Anti-Atlas. Computed tomography scanning reveals the undeformed shape of the jaws and hyoid arch, which are of a kind often used to represent primitive conditions for jawed vertebrates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnatomical knowledge of early chondrichthyans and estimates of their phylogeny are improving, but many taxa are still known only from microremains. The nearly cosmopolitan and regionally abundant Devonian genus has long been known solely from isolated teeth and fin spines. Here, we report the first skeletal remains of from the Famennian (Late Devonian) of the Maïder region of Morocco, revealing an anguilliform body, specialized braincase, hyoid arch, elongate jaws and rostrum, complementing its characteristic dentition and ctenacanth fin spines preceding both dorsal fins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHigh-performance suction feeding is often presented as a classic innovation of ray-finned fishes, likely contributing to their remarkable evolutionary success, whereas sharks, with seemingly less sophisticated jaws, are generally portrayed as morphologically conservative throughout their history. Here, using a combination of computational modeling, physical modeling, and quantitative three-dimensional motion simulation, we analyze the cranial skeleton of one of the earliest known stem elasmobranchs, from the Middle Mississippian of Scotland. The feeding apparatus is revealed as highly derived, capable of substantial oral expansion, and with clear potential for high-performance suction feeding some 50 million years before the earliest osteichthyan equivalent.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHagfish depart so much from other fishes anatomically that they were sometimes considered not fully vertebrate. They may represent: () an anatomically primitive outgroup of vertebrates (the morphology-based craniate hypothesis); or () an anatomically degenerate vertebrate lineage sister to lampreys (the molecular-based cyclostome hypothesis). This systematic conundrum has become a prominent case of conflict between morphology- and molecular-based phylogenies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe vacuum-ultraviolet photoinduced dynamics of cyclopropane (CH) were studied using time-resolved photoelectron spectroscopy (TRPES) in conjunction with quantum dynamics simulations. Following excitation at 160.8 nm, and subsequent probing via photoionization at 266.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough relationships among the major groups of living gnathostomes are well established, the relatedness of early jawed vertebrates to modern clades is intensely debated. Here, we provide a new description of , a Middle Devonian (Givetian approx. 385-million-year-old) stem chondrichthyan from Germany, and one of the very few early chondrichthyans in which substantial portions of the endoskeleton are preserved.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe vertebral column is a key component of the jawed vertebrate (gnathostome) body plan, but the primitive embryonic origin of this skeleton remains unclear. In tetrapods, all vertebral components (neural arches, haemal arches and centra) derive from paraxial mesoderm (somites). However, in teleost fishes, vertebrae have a dual embryonic origin, with arches derived from somites, but centra formed, in part, by secretion of bone matrix from the notochord.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe morphological patterns and molecular mechanisms of vertebral column development are well understood in bony fishes (osteichthyans). However, vertebral column morphology in elasmobranch chondrichthyans (e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChimaeroid fishes (Holocephali) are one of the four principal divisions of modern gnathostomes (jawed vertebrates). Despite only 47 described living species, chimaeroids are the focus of resurgent interest as potential archives of genomic data and for the unique perspective they provide on chondrichthyan and gnathostome ancestral conditions. Chimaeroids are also noteworthy for their highly derived body plan.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAs the sister lineage of all other actinopterygians, the Middle to Late Devonian (Eifelian-Frasnian) occupies a pivotal position in vertebrate phylogeny. Although the dermal skeleton of this taxon has been exhaustively described, very little of its endoskeleton is known, leaving questions of neurocranial and fin evolution in early ray-finned fishes unresolved. The model for early actinopterygian anatomy has instead been based largely on the Late Devonian (Frasnian) , preserved in stunning detail from the Gogo Formation of Australia.
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