Signalling pathways in trophic skeletal development and morphogenesis: Insights from studies on teleost fish
- PMID: 27713057
- DOI: 10.1016/j.ydbio.2016.10.003
Signalling pathways in trophic skeletal development and morphogenesis: Insights from studies on teleost fish
Abstract
During the development of the vertebrate feeding apparatus, a variety of complicated cellular and molecular processes participate in the formation and integration of individual skeletal elements. The molecular mechanisms regulating the formation of skeletal primordia and their development into specific morphological structures are tightly controlled by a set of interconnected signalling pathways. Some of these pathways, such as Bmp, Hedgehog, Notch and Wnt, are long known for their pivotal roles in craniofacial skeletogenesis. Studies addressing the functional details of their components and downstream targets, the mechanisms of their interactions with other signals as well as their potential roles in adaptive morphological divergence, are currently attracting considerable attention. An increasing number of signalling pathways that had previously been described in different biological contexts have been shown to be important in the regulation of jaw skeletal development and morphogenesis. In this review, I provide an overview of signalling pathways involved in trophic skeletogenesis emphasizing studies of the most species-rich group of vertebrates, the teleost fish, which through their evolutionary history have undergone repeated episodes of spectacular trophic diversification.
Keywords: Jaw; Molecular crosstalk; Signalling pathways; Skeletal development; Teleost fish; Trophic apparatus.
Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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