Expression of collier in the premandibular segment of myriapods: Support for the traditional Atelocerata concept or a case of convergence?

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Abstract

Background: A recent study on expression and function of the ortholog of the Drosophila collier (col) gene in various arthropods including insects, crustaceans and chelicerates suggested a de novo function of col in the development of the appendage-less intercalary segment of insects. However, this assumption was made on the background of the now widely-accepted Pancrustacea hypothesis that hexapods represent an in-group of the crustaceans. It was therefore assumed that the expression of col in myriapods would reflect the ancestral state like in crustaceans and chelicerates, i.e. absence from the premandibular/intercalary segment and hence no function in its formation. Results: We find that col in myriapods is expressed at early developmental stages in the same anterior domain in the head, the parasegment 0, as in insects. Comparable early expression of col is not present in the anterior head of an onychophoran that serves as an out-group species closely related to the arthropods. Conclusions: Our findings suggest either that i) the function of col in head development has been conserved between insects and myriapods, and that these two classes of arthropods may be closely related supporting the traditional Atelocerata (or Tracheata) hypothesis; or ii) alternatively col function could have been lost in early head development in crustaceans, or may indeed have evolved convergently in insects and myriapods. © 2011 Janssen et al.

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Janssen, R., Damen, W. G., & Budd, G. E. (2011). Expression of collier in the premandibular segment of myriapods: Support for the traditional Atelocerata concept or a case of convergence? BMC Evolutionary Biology, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-11-50

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