Abstract

The rise of the Evo-Devo field and the development of multidisciplinary research tools at various levels of biological organization have led to a growing interest in researching for new non-model organisms. Squamates (lizards and snakes) are particularly important for understanding fundamental questions about the evolution of vertebrates because of their high diversity and evolutionary innovations and adaptations that portrait a striking body plan change that reached its extreme in snakes. Yet, little is known about the intricate connection between phenotype and genotype in squamates, partly due to limited developmental knowledge and incomplete characterization of embryonic development. Surprisingly, squamate models have received limited attention in comparative developmental studies, and only a few species examined so far can be considered as representative and appropriate model organism for mechanistic Evo-Devo studies. Fortunately, the agamid lizard Pogona vitticeps (central bearded dragon) is one of the most popular, domesticated reptile species with both a well-established history in captivity and key advantages for research, thus forming an ideal laboratory model system and justifying his recent use in reptile biology research. We first report here the complete post-oviposition embryonic development for P. vitticeps based on standardized staging systems and external morphological characters previously defined for squamates. Whereas the overall morphological development follows the general trends observed in other squamates, our comparisons indicate major differences in the developmental sequence of several tissues, including early craniofacial characters. Detailed analysis of both embryonic skull development and adult skull shape, using a comparative approach integrating CT-scans and gene expression studies in P. vitticeps as well as comparative embryology and 3D geometric morphometrics in a large dataset of lizards and snakes, highlights the extreme adult skull shape of P. vitticeps and further indicates that heterochrony has played a key role in the early development and ossification of squamate skull bones. Such detailed studies of embryonic character development, craniofacial patterning, and bone formation are essential for the establishment of well-selected squamate species as Evo-Devo model organisms. We expect that P. vitticeps will continue to emerge as a new attractive model organism for understanding developmental and molecular processes underlying tissue formation, morphology, and evolution.

Highlights

  • The wide recognition of the importance to connect the field of evolution with developmental biology (Evo-Devo) in a mechanistic perspective, alongside with both the development of new multidisciplinary research tools and the employment of new types of molecular data in modern comparative developmental approaches have led to an explosion of interest for new model organisms

  • As a prerequisite for the establishment and use of new reptile species as Evo-Devo model organisms, we describe here the complete, detailed post-oviposition development of the agamid lizard P. vitticeps based on external morphological characters previously defined for squamates, using the standardized Standard Event System (SES) staging system (Werneburg, 2009; Polachowski and Werneburg, 2013; Werneburg et al, 2015) and other commonly used staging characters available for snake and lizard species (Dufaure and Hubert, 1961; Sanger et al, 2008)

  • Additional embryonic characters commonly used in squamates (Dufaure and Hubert, 1961; Sanger et al, 2008; Polachowski and Werneburg, 2013; Werneburg et al, 2015) and/or already described for P. vitticeps based on other staging systems (Melville et al, 2016; Whiteley et al, 2017) were included in our analysis to obtain a unified and complete staging system allowing multi-species comparisons

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The wide recognition of the importance to connect the field of evolution with developmental biology (Evo-Devo) in a mechanistic perspective, alongside with both the development of new multidisciplinary research tools and the employment of new types of molecular data in modern comparative developmental approaches have led to an explosion of interest for new model organisms. Squamate models are useful for shedding light onto the multiple genotype-phenotype paths taken in the evolution of amniotes and for understanding fundamental questions about the evolution of morphological diversity, including extreme body form such as limb loss and axial skeleton elongation (Gomez et al, 2008; Di-Poï et al, 2010; Head and Polly, 2015; Kvon et al, 2016; Leal and Cohn, 2016) For these purposes, developmental staging tables based on external embryonic features have been reported for multiple lizard and snake species from different families (Tables 1, 2).

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call