How body patterning might have worked in the evolution of arthropods-A case study of the mystacocarid Derocheilocaris remanei (Crustacea, Oligostraca)
- PMID: 35486026
- DOI: 10.1002/jez.b.23140
How body patterning might have worked in the evolution of arthropods-A case study of the mystacocarid Derocheilocaris remanei (Crustacea, Oligostraca)
Abstract
Body organization within arthropods is enormously diverse, but a fusion of segments into "functional groups" (tagmatization) is found in all species. Within Tetraconata/Pancrustacea, an anterior head, a locomotory thorax region, and a posterior, mostly limbless tagma known as the abdomen is present. The posterior-most tagma in crustaceans is frequently confused with the malacostracan, for example, decapod pleon often misleadingly termed abdomen, however, its evolutionary and developmental origin continues to pose a riddle, especially the completely limbless abdomen of the "entomostracan morphotype" (e.g., fairy shrimps). Since the discovery of Hox genes and their involvement in specifying the morphology or identity of segments, tagmata, or regions along the anteroposterior axis of an organism, only a few studies have focused on model organisms representing the "entomostracan morphotype" and used a variety of dedicated Hox genes and their transcription products to shine light on abdomen formation. The homeotic genes or the molecular processes that determine the identity of the entomostracan abdomen remain unknown to date. This study focuses on the "entomostracan morphotype" representative Derocheilocaris remanei (Mystacocarida). We present a complete overview of development throughout larval stages and investigate homeotic gene expression data using the antibody FP6.87 that binds specifically to epitopes of Ultrabithorax/Abdominal-A proteins. Our results suggest that the abdomen in Mystacocarida is bipartite (abdomen I + abdomen II). We suggest that the limbless abdomen is an evolutionary novelty that evolved several times independently within crustaceans and which might be the result of a progressive reduction of former thoracic segments into abdominal segments.
Keywords: Hox genes; abdomen; entomostraca; evo-devo; patterning; tagmatization.
© 2022 The Authors. Journal of Experimental Zoology Part B: Molecular and Developmental Evolution published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.
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