TY - JOUR
T1 - Developmental bias in the evolution of phalanges
AU - Kavanagh, Kathryn D.
AU - Shoval, Oren
AU - Winslow, Benjamin B.
AU - Alon, Uri
AU - Leary, Brian P.
AU - Kan, Akinori
AU - Tabin, Clifford J.
N1 - National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases [P01DK056246]; University of Massachusetts DartmouthWe thank the members of the C.J.T. and K.D.K. laboratories for comments on the research and manuscript, L. Mahler and S. Mallick for assistance with data analysis, C. Koeppl for providing embryos, and the British Museum of Natural History and Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard University for access to specimens. This work was supported by National Institutes of Health/National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases Grant P01DK056246 (to C.J.T.) and funds from the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth (to K.D.K.).
PY - 2013/11/5
Y1 - 2013/11/5
N2 - Evolutionary theory has long argued that the entrenched rules of development constrain the range of variations in a given form, but few empirical examples are known. Here we provide evidence for a very deeply conserved skeletal module constraining the morphology of the phalanges within a digit. We measured the sizes of phalanges within populations of two bird species and found that successive phalanges within a digit exhibit predictable relative proportions, whether those phalanges are nearly equal in size or exhibit a more striking gradient in size from large to small. Experimental perturbations during early stages of digit formation demonstrate that the sizes of the phalanges within a digit are regulated as a system rather than individually. However, the sizes of the phalanges are independent of the metatarsals. Temporal studies indicate that the relative sizes of the phalanges are established at the time of initial cell condensation. Measurements of phalanges across species from six major taxonomic lineages showed that the same predictable range of variants is conserved across vast taxonomic diversity and evolutionary time, starting with the very origins of tetrapods. Although in general phalangeal variations fall within a range of nearly equal-sized phalanges to those following a steep large-to-small gradient, a novel derived condition of excessive elongation of the distal-most phalanges has evolved convergently in multiple lineages, for example under selection for grasping rather than walking or swimming. Even in the context of this exception, phalangeal variations observed in nature are a small subset of potential morphospace.
AB - Evolutionary theory has long argued that the entrenched rules of development constrain the range of variations in a given form, but few empirical examples are known. Here we provide evidence for a very deeply conserved skeletal module constraining the morphology of the phalanges within a digit. We measured the sizes of phalanges within populations of two bird species and found that successive phalanges within a digit exhibit predictable relative proportions, whether those phalanges are nearly equal in size or exhibit a more striking gradient in size from large to small. Experimental perturbations during early stages of digit formation demonstrate that the sizes of the phalanges within a digit are regulated as a system rather than individually. However, the sizes of the phalanges are independent of the metatarsals. Temporal studies indicate that the relative sizes of the phalanges are established at the time of initial cell condensation. Measurements of phalanges across species from six major taxonomic lineages showed that the same predictable range of variants is conserved across vast taxonomic diversity and evolutionary time, starting with the very origins of tetrapods. Although in general phalangeal variations fall within a range of nearly equal-sized phalanges to those following a steep large-to-small gradient, a novel derived condition of excessive elongation of the distal-most phalanges has evolved convergently in multiple lineages, for example under selection for grasping rather than walking or swimming. Even in the context of this exception, phalangeal variations observed in nature are a small subset of potential morphospace.
KW - Developmental constraint
KW - Developmental module
KW - Phalanx
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84887268996&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1073/pnas.1315213110
DO - 10.1073/pnas.1315213110
M3 - Article
C2 - 24151335
SN - 0027-8424
VL - 110
SP - 18190
EP - 18195
JO - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
IS - 45
ER -