Chordate origins and evolution : the molecular evolutionary road to vertebrates

Bibliographic Information

Chordate origins and evolution : the molecular evolutionary road to vertebrates

Noriyuki Satoh

Academic Press is an imprint of Elsevier, c2016

Available at  / 2 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 177-200) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Chordate Origins and Evolution: The Molecular Evolutionary Road to Vertebrates focuses on echinoderms (starfish, sea urchins, and others), hemichordates (acorn worms, etc.), cephalochordates (lancelets), urochordates or tunicates (ascidians, larvaceans and others), and vertebrates. In general, evolution of these groups is discussed independently, on a larger scale: ambulacrarians (echi+hemi) and chordates (cephlo+uro+vert). Until now, discussion of these topics has been somewhat fragmented, and this work provides a unified presentation of the essential information. In the more than 150 years since Charles Darwin proposed the concept of the origin of species by means of natural selection, which has profoundly affected all fields of biology and medicine, the evolution of animals (metazoans) has been studied, discussed, and debated extensively. Following many decades of classical comparative morphology and embryology, the 1980s marked a turning point in studies of animal evolution, when molecular biological approaches, including molecular phylogeny (MP), molecular evolutionary developmental biology (evo-devo), and comparative genomics (CG), began to be employed. There are at least five key events in metazoan evolution, which include the origins of 1) diploblastic animals, such as cnidarians; 2) triploblastic animals or bilaterians; 3) protostomes and deuterostomes; 4) chordates, among deuterostomes; and 5) vertebrates, among chordates. The last two have received special attention in relation to evolution of human beings. During the past two decades, great advances have been made in this field, especially in regard to molecular and developmental mechanisms involved in the evolution of chordates. For example, the interpretation of phylogenetic relationships among deuterostomes has drastically changed. In addition, we have now obtained a large quantity of MP, evo-devo, and CG information on the origin and evolution of chordates.

Table of Contents

1. Deuterostomes and Chordates2. Hypotheses on Chordate Origins3. Fossil Records4. Molecular Phylogeny5. Comparative Genomics of Deuterostomes6. The Origins of Chordates7. The New Organizers Hypothesis for Chordate Origins8. The Dorsoventral-Axis Inversion Hypothesis: The Embryogenetic Basis for the Appearance of Chordates9. The Enteropneust Hypothesis and Its Interpretation10. Chordate Evolution: An Extension of the New Organizers Hypothesis11. How Did Chordates Originate and Evolve?12. Summary and Perspective

by "Nielsen BookData"

Details

Page Top