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Publication : Transcriptomic insights into the genetic basis of mammalian limb diversity.

First Author  Maier JA Year  2017
Journal  BMC Evol Biol Volume  17
Issue  1 Pages  86
PubMed ID  28335721 Mgi Jnum  J:356043
Mgi Id  MGI:7762135 Doi  10.1186/s12862-017-0902-6
Citation  Maier JA, et al. (2017) Transcriptomic insights into the genetic basis of mammalian limb diversity. BMC Evol Biol 17(1):86
abstractText  BACKGROUND: From bat wings to whale flippers, limb diversification has been crucial to the evolutionary success of mammals. We performed the first transcriptome-wide study of limb development in multiple species to explore the hypothesis that mammalian limb diversification has proceeded through the differential expression of conserved shared genes, rather than by major changes to limb patterning. Specifically, we investigated the manner in which the expression of shared genes has evolved within and among mammalian species. RESULTS: We assembled and compared transcriptomes of bat, mouse, opossum, and pig fore- and hind limbs at the ridge, bud, and paddle stages of development. Results suggest that gene expression patterns exhibit larger variation among species during later than earlier stages of limb development, while within species results are more mixed. Consistent with the former, results also suggest that genes expressed at later developmental stages tend to have a younger evolutionary age than genes expressed at earlier stages. A suite of key limb-patterning genes was identified as being differentially expressed among the homologous limbs of all species. However, only a small subset of shared genes is differentially expressed in the fore- and hind limbs of all examined species. Similarly, a small subset of shared genes is differentially expressed within the fore- and hind limb of a single species and among the forelimbs of different species. CONCLUSIONS: Taken together, results of this study do not support the existence of a phylotypic period of limb development ending at chondrogenesis, but do support the hypothesis that the hierarchical nature of development translates into increasing variation among species as development progresses.
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