The great
morphological complexity and diversity that we see in multicellular organisms
is produced by developmental processes that have evolved in response to natural
selection. But how do these developmental processes evolve? Direct development occurs when embryos
develop directly into adult-like forms instead of progressing through a larval
stage (Indirectdevelopment). This
striking divergence in developmental mode has evolved independently in many
animal lineages, including sea urchins, ascidians, frogs, and salamanders. The
evolutionary forces and genetic mechanisms promoting such radical, and
sometimes rapid, changes in development and life history have mystified
biologists for over a century. Comparisons of embryogenesis and larval
morphogenesis, especially among marine invertebrates, are central topics in
both classical developmental biology and modern evolutionary developmental
biology.
These examples suggest several
questions: What are the selective pressures that favor such a novel
evolutionary trajectory? How could such a profound alteration of early
development evolve so many times? And, perhaps most challenging, what genetic
and developmental processes are involved in these evolutionary alterations? It
is likely that selection for rapid development promotes the evolution of direct
development. But even though some of the genes that underlie these alternative
developmental trajectories are beginning to be uncovered, the developmental
mechanisms involved and more importantly, the reasons why these mechanisms are
apparently more flexible in some groups of organisms than others are still
mysteries.
The
field of evolutionary developmental biology, or EDB (often called
"evo-devo"), seeks to understand the mechanisms by which development
has evolved, both in terms of developmental processes (for example, what novel
cell or tissue interactions are responsible for novel morphologies in certain
taxa) and in terms of evolutionary processes (for example, what selection
pressures promoted the evolution of these novel morphologies). Two of the main
questions or themes that concern evolutionary developmental biologists are,
first, what role has developmental
evolution played in the history of life On Earth? and second, do the
developmental trajectories that produce phenotypes bias the production of variation
or constraint trajectories of evolutionary change? Natural selection acts
on phenotypes produced by development, but ultimately we want to understand how
the modes by which development produces those phenotypes affect evolutionary
potentials and trajectories.
Direct
versus indirect development. (A) A pluteus larva of the indirect-developing sea
urchin Heliocidaris tuberculata. (B) A nonfeeding larva of the
direct developing congeneric species H. erythrogramma. In H.
erythrogramma, the ancestral larval mode has been lost and embryos initiate
the program for adult morphogenesis without an intervening pluteus stage. None
of the complex morphological features of the pluteus are present in H.
erythrogramma larvae, yet these two species are so closely related
that they can be interbred in the laboratory. (Photos courtesy of R. Raff.)
Introductio to Evo-Devo (YouTube video: 8min 52seg)
Biologists dating back to Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire (1772-1844), Karl
Ernst von Baer (1792- 1876), and Darwin himself were fascinated by the patterns
of similarity and divergence in development among species. However until quite
recently, the fields of evolutionary biology and developmental biology preceded
along mostly separate parts, with seemingly distinct research programs and
methodologies. In the past three decades, however, burgeoning information about
the genetic mechanisms of morphogenesis in model organisms, as well as the
molecular genetic techniques developed to obtain that information, have been
integrated with many strands of evolutionary research to form the highly interdisciplinary
field now known as Evolutionary Developmental Biology EDB.
Figure 1. A) Wild-type D. melanoganster
with a single pair of wings and a pair of
winglike structure, halteres. B) A mutant
fly was experimentally produce by combining
several mutations in the regulatory region
of the Ultrabithorax (Ubx) gene. The third
thoracic segment has been transfonned,
bearing wings instead of haltares.
(Photo by E.B. Lewis).
The discovery and characterization of the Hox cluster of homeobox genes
in animals in the 1970 and 1980 marks the dawn of modern EDB. The Hox genes are
the best known class of homeotic selector genes, which control the patterning
of specific body structures. Hox genes control the identity of segments along
the anterior-posterior body axis of all metazoans. Mutations in the Hox genes
often cause transformations of one type of segment into another. In Drosophilamelanoganster for example, a mutation of the Ultrabithorax (Ubx) gene
transforms the third thoracic segment (T3), which normally bears the tiny
halteres (the Drosophila homologue of
the hindwing of four-winged insects), into a second thoracic segment (T2),
which bears
wings (Figure 1 a, b). A
mutation in another Hox gene, Antennapedia (Antp), causes
the misexpression of Antp protein in
the cells that normally give rise to the antennae, resulting in the replacement
of antennae with legs (Figure 2). Antp is normally
expressed only in the second thoracic segment (TI), where it controls the
development of T2-specific body structures, including legs.
Figure 2. A) Frontal view of the head of a wild-type Drosophila melanogaster, showing normal antennae and mouthparts. B) Head of a fly carrying Antennapedia mutation, which converts antennae into legs. (Photo by F.R. Turner).
In Drosophila, the Hox genes occur in two complexes (clusters) of
genes on chromosome 3, termed the
Antennapedia complex and the bithorax complex. The pioneering genetic work on the bithorax complex was done between
the 1940s and the 1970s by E. B. Lewis, and that on the Antennapedia complex in
the 1970s and 1980s by Thomas Kaufman and his colleagues. These investigators found that the genes in both
complexes control the anterior-posterior identity of segments corresponding to
their order on the chromosome (Figure 3). They also discovered that the eight Drosophila Hox
genes are members of a single gene
family, and that the proteins they encode share a particular amino acid sequence
that binds DNA, subsequently named the homeobox (in the gene) or the homeodamain
(in the protein). This finding supported Lewis's idea, proposed in the 1960s,
that the Hox genes regulate the
transcription of other genes. Other researchers were stunned to discover that
all other animal phyla also possess a set of Hox genes. These genes have
homeodomain sequences similar to those of their homologues in Drosophila and
have the same gene order and orientation as in Drosophila (except that
they form a single gene complex in most animals). Mammals have four Hox
gene complexes (denoted Hoxn, Hoxb, Hoxc, and
Hoxd)
in
different parts of the genome, and a total of 13 different Hox genes (as
opposed to only 8 in Drosophila), although not all of the complexes have
all 13 members (Figure 4).
Figure 4. (right panel) Probable evolution of the metazoan Hox
gene complex. Vertical white lines delineate currently accepted groups of orthologous Hox genes.
Important gene duplication events are indicated by the labeled tick
marks (Image from the book, Evolution 2009). References:
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