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The temporal dynamics of vertebrate limb development, teratogenesis and evolution

Journal

CURRENT OPINION IN GENETICS & DEVELOPMENT
Volume 20, Issue 4, Pages 384-390

Publisher

CURRENT BIOLOGY LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.gde.2010.04.014

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Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation
  2. University of both cantons Basel

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Recent genetic and functional analysis of vertebrate limb development begins to reveal how the functions of particular genes and regulatory hierarchies can drastically change over time. The temporal and spatial interplay of the two instructive signalling centres are part of a larger signalling system that orchestrates limb bud morphogenesis in a rather self-regulatory manner. It appears that mesenchymal cells are specified early and subsequently, the progenitors for the different skeletal elements are expanded and determined progressively during outgrowth. Mutations and teratogens that disrupt distal progression of limb development most often cause death of the early-specified progenitors rather than altering their fates. The proliferative expansion and distal progression of paired appendage development was one of the main driving forces behind the transition from fin to limb buds during paired appendage evolution. Finally, the adaptive diversification or loss of modern tetrapod limbs in particular phyla or species appear to be a consequence of evolutionary tampering with the regulatory systems that control distal progression of limb development.

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