Abstract

Mechanisms and evolution of primary axis specification in insects are discussed in the context of the roles of ß-catenin and TCF in polarizing metazoan embryos. Three hypotheses are presented. First, insects with sequential segmentation and posterior growth use cell-autonomous mechanisms for establishing embryo polarity via the nuclear ratio of ß-catenin and TCF. Second, TCF homologs establish competence for anterior specification. Third, the evolution of simultaneous segmentation mechanisms, also known as long-germ development, resulted in primary axis specification mechanisms that are independent of ß-catenin but reliant on TCF, a condition that preceded the frequent replacement of anterior determinants in long germ insects.

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