1. Evolutionary biology: hedgehog crosses the snail's midline.
- Author
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Nederbragt AJ, van Loon AE, and Dictus WJ
- Subjects
- Amino Acid Sequence, Animals, Drosophila anatomy & histology, Drosophila embryology, Drosophila genetics, Evolution, Molecular, Humans, Larva anatomy & histology, Larva genetics, Larva growth & development, Larva metabolism, Molecular Sequence Data, Nervous System anatomy & histology, Nervous System embryology, Nervous System growth & development, Nervous System metabolism, Proteins chemistry, Proteins genetics, Snails anatomy & histology, Snails genetics, Biological Evolution, Body Patterning, Proteins metabolism, Snails growth & development, Snails metabolism
- Abstract
According to the dorsoventral axis-inversion theory, protostomes (such as insects, snails and worms) are organized upside-down by comparison with deuterostomes (vertebrates), in which case their respective ventrally (belly-side) and dorsally (back-side) located nervous systems, as well as their midline regions, should all be derived from a common ancestor. Here we provide experimental evidence for such homology by showing that an orthologue of hedgehog, an important gene in midline patterning in vertebrates, is expressed along the belly of the larva of the limpet Patella vulgata. This finding supports the existence of a similar mechanism for the development of the midline of the nervous system in protostomes and deuterostomes.
- Published
- 2002
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