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Mammalian skull heterochrony reveals modular evolution and a link between cranial development and brain size

Authors :
Marcelo R. Sánchez-Villagra
Nguyen Truong Son
Analía M. Forasiepi
Naoki Morimoto
Christoph P. E. Zollikofer
Daisuke Koyabu
Hideki Endo
Junpei Kimura
Satoshi D. Ohdachi
Ingmar Werneburg
University of Zurich
Koyabu, Daisuke
Source :
Nature Communications, Nature communications
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

The multiple skeletal components of the skull originate asynchronously and their developmental schedule varies across amniotes. Here we present the embryonic ossification sequence of 134 species, covering all major groups of mammals and their close relatives. This comprehensive data set allows reconstruction of the heterochronic and modular evolution of the skull and the condition of the last common ancestor of mammals. We show that the mode of ossification (dermal or endochondral) unites bones into integrated evolutionary modules of heterochronic changes and imposes evolutionary constraints on cranial heterochrony. However, some skull-roof bones, such as the supraoccipital, exhibit evolutionary degrees of freedom in these constraints. Ossification timing of the neurocranium was considerably accelerated during the origin of mammals. Furthermore, association between developmental timing of the supraoccipital and brain size was identified among amniotes. We argue that cranial heterochrony in mammals has occurred in concert with encephalization but within a conserved modular organization.<br />The skeletal components of the skull develop at different times in mammals. Here, Koyabu et al. show that the mode of bone ossification constrains the timing of bone formation and find an association between the developmental timing of the supraoccipital bone and brain size.

Details

Volume :
5
Issue :
3225
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fb6474d06f42ee40574349e00a2ee390