Formation of the arthropod labrum by fusion of paired and rotated limb-bud-like primordia |
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Authors: | Melanie A. Kimm Nikola-Michael Prpic |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department Biologie II, Zoologisches Institut, LMU München, Gro?haderner Stra?e 2, 82152, Planegg-Martinsried, Germany 3. Institut für Immunologie, LMU München, Goethestrasse 31, 80336, Munchen, Germany 2. Department for Evolutionary Genetics, Institut für Genetik, Universit?t zu K?ln, Zülpicher Stra?e 47, 50674, Koln, Germany 4. Department of Biology, University College London, Darwin Building, Gower Street, London, WC1E 6BT, UK
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Abstract: | The nature and origin of the arthropod labrum is a matter much under dispute. We show here that in Tribolium castaneum (Herbst, 1797) the labrum develops from two individual primordia, termed labral buds. Expression of the genes decapentaplegic (dpp) and wingless (wg) in these buds is identical to the buds of the metameric appendages (e.g. thoracic legs), except that the patterns are reversed. We propose that this reversal is the result of the rotation of the labral buds through an angle of approximately 180°. We also for the first time study dpp and wg expression in the fully developed labrum of older embryonic stages. Here, gene expression patterns show that the labrum proper is formed by fusion of the labral buds along their dorsal sides, while their ventral sides are facing outward forming the lateral sides of the fused labrum. Furthermore, we show that there are very similar patterns in another arthropod species, the spider Cupiennius salei (Keyserling, 1877), although in this species the labrum develops as a single structure and not from two separate primordia. However, in C. salei the expression of engrailed is also reversed in addition to the reversal of dpp and wg expression: engrailed is expressed in the anterior half of the labrum, and not in the posterior half like in the remaining appendages. Our results suggest that the arthropod labrum is derived evolutionarily from paired limb-bud-like primordia by rotation and fusion, and that this process is recapitulated ontogenetically to a different extent in different arthropod species. |
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Keywords: | Wingless Decapentaplegic Engrailed Tribolium castaneum Cupiennius salei Labrum Arthropod evolution |
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