Abstract

BackgroundThe evolution of elongated body forms in tetrapods has a strong influence on the musculoskeletal system, including the reduction of pelvic and pectoral girdles, as well as the limbs. However, despite extensive research in this area it still remains unknown how muscles within and around bony girdles are affected by these reductions. Here we investigate this issue using fossorial amphisbaenian reptiles, or worm lizards, as a model system, which show substantial variation in the degree of reductions of girdles and limbs. Using iodine-based contrast-enhanced computed tomography (diceCT), we analyze the composition of the shoulder muscles of the main clades of Amphisbaenia and their outgroups relative to the pectoral skeleton.ResultsAll investigated amphisbaenian taxa retain the full set of 17 shoulder muscles, independent of the degree of limb and girdle reductions, whereas in some cases muscles are fused to complexes or changed in morphology relative to the ancestral condition. Bipes is the only taxon that retains forelimbs and an almost complete pectoral girdle. All other amphisbaenian families show more variation concerning the completeness of the pectoral girdle having reduced or absent girdle elements. Rhineura, which undergoes the most severe bone reductions, differs from all other taxa in possessing elongated muscle strands instead of discrete shoulder muscles. In all investigated amphisbaenians, the shoulder muscle agglomerate is shortened and shifted anteriorly relative to the ancestral position as seen in the outgroups.ConclusionsOur results show that pectoral muscle anatomy does not necessarily correspond to the loss or reduction of bones, indicating a decoupling of the musculoskeletal system. Muscle attachment sites change from bones to non-skeletal areas, such as surrounding muscles, skin or connective tissue, whereas muscle origins themselves remain in the same region where the pectoral bones were ancestrally located. Our findings indicate a high degree of developmental autonomy within the musculoskeletal system, we predict that the observed evolutionary rearrangements of amphisbaenian shoulder muscles were driven by functional demands rather than by developmental constraints. Nevertheless, worm lizards display a spatial offset of both pectoral bones and muscles relative to the ancestral position, indicating severe developmental modifications of the amphisbaenian body axis.

Highlights

  • The evolution of elongated body forms in tetrapods has a strong influence on the musculoskeletal system, including the reduction of pelvic and pectoral girdles, as well as the limbs

  • Whereas patterns of bone reduction have been frequently studied in various clades of lizards [3, 13,14,15,16,17,18,19], it still remains poorly understood as to what extent muscle anatomy is affected by these processes

  • Material & Methods We used a personally developed protocol for diffusible iodine-based contrast-enhanced computed tomography (diceCT) visualization, and applied this method to individuals belonging to five amphisbaenian species, Rhineura floridana, Bipes biporus, Blanus strauchi, Trogonophis wiegmanni and Cynisca leucura, which are representatives of the five major clades of Amphisbaenia, Table 1 Presence and condition of different pectoral girdle elements across amphisbaenian families

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Summary

Introduction

The evolution of elongated body forms in tetrapods has a strong influence on the musculoskeletal system, including the reduction of pelvic and pectoral girdles, as well as the limbs. Previous studies on lizard digit morphology suggest that muscle anatomy does not necessarily correspond to the loss or reduction of bones [6]; a finding that is in concert with developmental investigations on mouse limbs and studies on the normal phenotype of non-pentadactyl animals, and of human birth defects, suggesting that skeletal and connective tissue patterning are decoupled [1, 6, 20,21,22,23] It still remains unknown how the musculoskeletal system is integrated along the main body axis, and there is practically no information on muscle anatomy and topology within and around reduced bony girdles. Given that such a fundamental evolutionary transformation as body elongation requires more anatomical changes than the mere reduction of extremities, this lack of knowledge is unfortunate

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