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Author Topic:   Bats: or half-a-wing is better than no wing.
DBlevins
Member (Idle past 3802 days)
Posts: 652
From: Puyallup, WA.
Joined: 02-04-2003


Message 1 of 2 (306238)
04-24-2006 12:46 AM


A new article on the devlopment of flight in Bats:
Abstract:
Development of bat flight: Morphologic and molecular evolution of bat wing digits
Karen E. Sears *, Richard R. Behringer , John J. Rasweiler IV , and Lee A. Niswander *
The earliest fossil bats resemble their modern counterparts in possessing greatly elongated digits to support the wing membrane, which is an anatomical hallmark of powered flight. To quantitatively confirm these similarities, we performed a morphometric analysis of wing bones from fossil and modern bats. We found that the lengths of the third, fourth, and fifth digits (the primary supportive elements of the wing) have remained constant relative to body size over the last 50 million years. This absence of transitional forms in the fossil record led us to look elsewhere to understand bat wing evolution. Investigating embryonic development, we found that the digits in bats (Carollia perspicillata) are initially similar in size to those of mice (Mus musculus) but that, subsequently, bat digits greatly lengthen. The developmental timing of the change in wing digit length points to a change in longitudinal cartilage growth, a process that depends on the relative proliferation and differentiation of chondrocytes. We found that bat forelimb digits exhibit relatively high rates of chondrocyte proliferation and differentiation. We show that bone morphogenetic protein 2 (Bmp2) can stimulate cartilage proliferation and differentiation and increase digit length in the bat embryonic forelimb. Also, we show that Bmp2 expression and Bmp signaling are increased in bat forelimb embryonic digits relative to mouse or bat hind limb digits. Together, our results suggest that an up-regulation of the Bmp pathway is one of the major factors in the developmental elongation of bat forelimb digits, and it is potentially a key mechanism in their evolutionary elongation as well.
found here: PNAS

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 Message 2 by pink sasquatch, posted 04-24-2006 6:48 PM DBlevins has not replied

  
pink sasquatch
Member (Idle past 6049 days)
Posts: 1567
Joined: 06-10-2004


Message 2 of 2 (306328)
04-24-2006 6:48 PM
Reply to: Message 1 by DBlevins
04-24-2006 12:46 AM


we don't always expect transitionals
Thanks for the post.
I just wanted to point out one important conclusion of this finding: These sorts of studies (and there are others in other organisms) demonstrate that in many instances we should see gaps in fossil records, for purely biological reasons.
There are many single gene changes, especially in basic growth pathways, that produce a sudden drastic change in morphology, skipping over all the "transitional" stages between the two phenotypes.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 1 by DBlevins, posted 04-24-2006 12:46 AM DBlevins has not replied

  
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