4.4 Review

Limb positioning and initiation: An evolutionary context of pattern and formation

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL DYNAMICS
Volume 250, Issue 9, Pages 1264-1279

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/dvdy.308

Keywords

Evo‐ Devo; genetic networks; heterochrony; limb development; limb positioning

Funding

  1. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development [HD032443]

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Before limbs or fins are able to grow, they must go through a specific design and initiation stage. This initiation phase involves designating a portion of lateral plate mesoderm as the future limb site, followed by a series of cellular and molecular events that shape the limb bud. Research has provided insight into how these events generate the limb bud and lead to variations in limb forms.
Before limbs or fins, can be patterned and grow they must be initiated. Initiation of the limb first involves designating a portion of lateral plate mesoderm along the flank as the site of the future limb. Following specification, a myriad of cellular and molecular events interact to generate a bud that will grow and form the limb. The past three decades has provided a wealth of understanding on how those events generate the limb bud and how variations in them result in different limb forms. Comparatively, much less attention has been given to the earliest steps of limb formation and what impacts altering the position and initiation of the limb have had on evolution. Here, we first review the processes and pathways involved in these two phases of limb initiation, as determined from amniote model systems. We then broaden our scope to examine how variation in the limb initiation module has contributed to biological diversity in amniotes. Finally, we review what is known about limb initiation in fish and amphibians, and consider what mechanisms are conserved across vertebrates.

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