Placodes are focal thickenings of the surface ectoderm which, together with neural crest, generate the peripheral nervous system of the vertebrate head. Here we examine how, in embryonic mice, apoptosis contributes to the remodelling of the primordial posterior placodal area (PPA) into physically separated otic and epibranchial placodes. Using pharmacological inhibition of apoptosis-associated caspases, we find evidence that apoptosis eliminates hitherto undiscovered rudiments of the lateral line sensory system which, in fish and aquatic amphibia, serves to detect movements, pressure changes or electric fields in the surrounding water. Our results refute the evolutionary theory, valid for more than a century that the whole lateral line was completely lost in amniotes. Instead, those parts of the PPA which, under experimental conditions, escape apoptosis have retained the developmental potential to produce lateral line placodes and the primordia of neuromasts that represent the major functional units of the mechanosensory lateral line system.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/bio.031815 | DOI Listing |
Elife
January 2025
Department of Physiology, Development and Neuroscience, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
The lateral line system enables fishes and aquatic-stage amphibians to detect local water movement via mechanosensory hair cells in neuromasts, and many species to detect weak electric fields via electroreceptors (modified hair cells) in ampullary organs. Both neuromasts and ampullary organs develop from lateral line placodes, but the molecular mechanisms underpinning ampullary organ formation are understudied relative to neuromasts. This is because the ancestral lineages of zebrafish (teleosts) and (frogs) independently lost electroreception.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Cell Dev Biol
March 2024
Department of Physiology, Development and Neuroscience, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
In electroreceptive jawed vertebrates, embryonic lateral line placodes give rise to electrosensory ampullary organs as well as mechanosensory neuromasts. Previous reports of shared gene expression suggest that conserved mechanisms underlie electroreceptor and mechanosensory hair cell development and that electroreceptors evolved as a transcriptionally related "sister cell type" to hair cells. We previously identified only one transcription factor gene, , as ampullary organ-restricted in the developing lateral line system of a chondrostean ray-finned fish, the Mississippi paddlefish ().
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Top Dev Biol
April 2024
Life Sciences Institute and Faculty of Dentistry, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Transplantation experiments have shown that a true organizer provides instructive signals that induce and pattern ectopic structures in the responding tissue. Here, we review craniofacial experiments to identify tissues with organizer properties and signals with organizer properties. In particular, we evaluate whether transformation of identity took place in the mesenchyme.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Cell Dev Biol
March 2024
Dipartimento di Biologia, Università degli Studi di Padova, Padova, Italy.
Tunicates, the sister group of vertebrates, offer a unique perspective for evolutionary developmental studies (Evo-Devo) due to their simple anatomical organization. Moreover, the separation of tunicates from vertebrates predated the vertebrate-specific genome duplications. As adults, they include both sessile and pelagic species, with very limited mobility requirements related mainly to water filtration.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlast Reconstr Surg Glob Open
November 2023
From the Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Osaka Medical and Pharmaceutical University, Takatsuki, Japan.
We report a rare case of congenital nostril stenosis because it is very interesting from the perspective of human embryo development. As we were not able to find a similar congenital case in the literature, we would like to describe it here. The patient is a 36-year-old woman who had bilateral congenital stenotic nostrils with horseshoe-like shape.
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