Author:
Lecaudey Laurène Alicia,Sturmbauer Christian,Singh Pooja,Ahi Ehsan Pashay
Abstract
AbstractEast African cichlid fishes represent a model to tackle adaptive changes and their connection to rapid speciation and ecological distinction. In comparison to bony craniofacial tissues, adaptive morphogenesis of soft tissues has been rarely addressed, particularly at the molecular level. The nuchal hump in cichlids fishes is one such soft-tissue and exaggerated trait that is hypothesized to play an innovative role in the adaptive radiation of cichlids fishes. It has also evolved in parallel across lakes in East Africa and Central America. Using gene expression profiling, we identified and validated a set of genes involved in nuchal hump formation in the Lake Malawi dolphin cichlid, Cyrtocara moorii. In particular, we found genes differentially expressed in the nuchal hump, which are involved in controlling cell proliferation (btg3, fosl1a and pdgfrb), cell growth (dlk1), craniofacial morphogenesis (dlx5a, mycn and tcf12), as well as regulators of growth-related signals (dpt, pappa and socs2). This is the first study to identify the set of genes associated with nuchal hump formation in cichlids. Given that the hump is a trait that evolved repeatedly in several African and American cichlid lineages, it would be interesting to see if the molecular pathways and genes triggering hump formation follow a common genetic track or if the trait evolved in parallel, with distinct mechanisms, in other cichlid adaptive radiations and even in other teleost fishes.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference126 articles.
1. Schartl, M. Beyond the zebrafish: diverse fish species for modeling human disease. Dis. Model. Mech. 7, 181 (2014).
2. Powder, K. E. & Albertson, R. C. Cichlid fishes as a model to understand normal and clinical craniofacial variation. Dev. Biol. 415, 338–346 (2016).
3. Hulsey, C. D., Fraser, G. J. & Streelman, J. T. Evolution and Development of Complex Biomechanical Systems: 300 Million Years of Fish Jaws. Zebrafish 2, 243–257 (2005).
4. Ahi, E. P. Signalling pathways in trophic skeletal development and morphogenesis: Insights from studies on teleost fish. Dev. Biol. 420, 11–31 (2016).
5. Machado-Schiaffino, G., Henning, F. & Meyer, A. Species-specific differences in adaptive phenotypic plasticity in an ecologically relevant trophic trait: hypertrophic lips in Midas cichlid fishes. Evolution (N. Y). 68, 2086–2091 (2014).
Cited by
18 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献