Title: Evolution Morphological Innovation
1Lecture 17
- Evolution Morphological Innovation
2Macroevolution
- Large scale patterns in evolution
- -How have changes occurred long term?
- Origin of whole groups of organisms
- When , where
- -species to kingdoms and domains
- Domains Archaea, Bacteria, Eukarya
- Novelties innovations
- Do new innovations and new species or groups
arise at the same time?
3MacroEvolutionary Changes
- Punctuated Equilibrium-
- Rapid evolutionary change followed by long
periods of stasis - Marked changes in fossil record
- Also gradualism
- Same evolutionary processes (variation, natural
selection etc.) acting at population levels but
viewed over long time
4Geologic Time Scale w Extinct
Humans
mammals
K-T Boundary
Flowering plants
Dinosaurs extinct
Cambrian Explosion
5Cambrian Explosion
Most phyla or living animals appeared within a 35
my period lt1 of earths history
6How did Evolutionary Diversity Arise?
- Most new features arise from preexisting cell
types in new location or timing - Arrival of new phyla during Cambrian consistent
with invention of new developmental programs - By early Cambrian all animals had evolved a
common genetic tool kit of developmental
programs - Changes in these program novel structures and
morphology
7Development-a key to evolutionEVO-DEVO
- Few, small genetic differences between species
produce large phenotypic differences - humans and chimpanzees
- similar genetic and cellular mechanisms of
development - dissimilar adult phenotypes
- alleles responsible for new traits must be active
early in development---gtadult phenotype - Mutants that change adult phenotype subject to
selection - Developmental regulation-key to morphological
innovation - Controls when and where organs develop and how
- How cells know where they are and what to do
- genes and gene clusters-Homeotic loci
8Homeotic Loci
- HL Genes whose products provide positional
information in a multicellular embryo - HOM-generally invertebrates
- HOX-vertebrates
- MADS-plants
- Molecular palenontology
- -common ancestor had genes before
diversification
9Homeotic Loci
- Code for regulatory proteins,
- control transcription of other genes
- bind to DNA
- Each locus within the complex contains a highly
conserved 180-bp sequence-the homeobox. - Homologous origin
10HOMeotic loci
- Gene complexes
- Related genes found together
- Produced bygene duplication
- Unique to each class or phylum
- Temporal and spatial colinearity
- 3 5 expression
- 3-gthead, 5-gtposterior, timing of expression
11Fig 17.1 HOX genes Drosophila
3
5
12Hox (HOM, MADS)Regulation
- Define where cells are in embryo
- In time and space
- Example Drosphila HOM
- two main clusters, bithorax and Antennepedia
complexes (Fig 18.1) - Bithorax cause defects in posterior half of
embryo - Antennepedia affects anterior
- Mutants
- flies missing one or more gene products can
produce segment-specific appendages in the wrong
place. - -cells misunderstand where they are (location)
- -transformed to different developmental fate
13Fig 17.2 Homeotic mutants
Legs growing from head
Extra wings
14Hox changes to Phenotype changes
- Each major clade of bilateral animals is
characterized by a particular suite of Hox genes - Specific changes in Hox cluster are associated
with particular animal clades. - Ex Abdominal B is associated with the evolution
of bilateral animals. - Entire Hox complex duplicated several times in
the lineage leading to vertebrates. May have been
important in the divergence of vertebrates from
other deuterostomes.
15Fig 17.3 Hox genes animals
16Complexity of metazoan body plans
- Number of loci in the gene complex correlates
with the overall complexity - Duplication and elaboration of genes in the Hox
complex was a genetic innovation made Cambrian
explosion possible - sponges and cnidarians have just 3-4 loci
- common ancestor of all bilateral animals had 10
loci - Diversification of animal body plans involved
changes in the timing or spatial location of Hox
gene expression
17Deep Homology
- Ancestral homeotic complexes
- Sister group to tetrapods is the lobe-finned
fishes of late Devonionmany structural
homologies between limbs of lobe-finned fish and
tetrapods. - ? the tetrapod limb is derived from the fins of
lobe-finned fish. Fig 17.7 - ? tetrapod limbs have a common ground plan,
resulting from a shared developmental program - ? Loci in the Hox family are critical to limb
development-tell where along the limb the cells
are as well as anterior to posterior in body - the shared developmental program observed in
tetrapod limbs is produced by homologous genes - ZPA, AER
18Fig 17.7 Fin bones, lobe fins
19At the genetic level, every type of
sticky-outey appendage found in animals appears
to be homologous!
- Arthropod limbs determined by same genes as
vertebrate limbs - instruct cells to form an outgrowth with
proximal-distal polarity (Distal-less) - Tetrapods may have gained hands and feet because
of a change in the timing and location of
homeotic gene expression - in the pattern of expression of shh and Hox genes
that changed the direction of the progress zone.
20Deep Homology-Development and Evolution
- Deep homologies exist in a series of important
structures and organs. - The genetic similarities that underlie otherwise
dissimilar structures - - -prediction about the kinds of structures that
should be found in the common ancestor from which
these genetic control networks were inherited.
21Ancestor of animals
- ? Serial repetition of some body parts without
complex differentiation of segments - ? A simple type of appendage, but not a complex
limb - ? Clusters of simple photo receptors but not an
image-forming eye - ? A contractile blood vessel rather than a heart,
and - Condensations of nerve cell bodies into nerve
cords, but not a brain
22Evolutionary Novelty
- Cell location relative to other cells and time of
activity must be specified precisely - polarity, spatial orientation etc.
- Changes in the specification of cell fates
- Major evolutionary mechanism for creation of
different forms - One basis for understanding origins of
evolutionary novelty in multi-cellular organisms
23Insights from Evo-Devo
- Evolution of very different morphologies relies
on reutilization of a small set of master
regulatory genes - The primacy of regulatory change as the driver of
evolution of new morphologies