Evolutionary development in basal mammaliaforms as revealed by a docodontan
Authors:
Luo et al
Abstract:
A new Late Jurassic docodontan shows specializations for a subterranean lifestyle. It is similar to extant subterranean golden moles in having reduced digit segments as compared to the ancestral phalangeal pattern of mammaliaforms and extant mammals. The reduction of digit segments can occur in mammals by fusion of the proximal and intermediate phalangeal precursors, a developmental process for which a gene and signaling network have been characterized in mouse and human. Docodontans show a positional shift of thoracolumbar ribs, a developmental variation that is controlled by Hox9 and Myf5 genes in extant mammals. We argue that these morphogenetic mechanisms of modern mammals were operating before the rise of modern mammals, driving the morphological disparity in the earliest mammaliaform diversification.
Friday, February 13, 2015
Docofossor: A Mole-like Docodont Mammaliaform Hints at "Modern" Morphogenetic Mechanisms Predate Mammals
Labels:
china,
cynodonts,
docodont,
fossils,
Jurassic,
late Jurassic,
Mammaliaform,
mammals,
mesozoic,
paleogenetics,
paleontology
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