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Title: Patterns of distal-less gene expression and inductive interactions in the head of the direct developing frog Eleutherodactylus coqui. Author: Fang H, Elinson RP. Journal: Dev Biol; 1996 Oct 10; 179(1):160-72. PubMed ID: 8873761. Abstract: The direct developing frog Eleutherodactylus coqui exhibits radical changes in its embryogenesis. A frog-like head forms directly with no appearance of a cement gland or several jaw cartilages characteristic of tadpoles, and limbs appear early in development. The numerous differences in the embryogenesis of E. coqui provide an opportunity to examine developmental causes for the evolutionary shift from biphasic to direct development. We have cloned DNA fragments corresponding to four E. coqui genes related to the Drosophila distal-less gene Dll. While the expression patterns of the distal-less genes are generally conserved, there are some spatiotemporal differences when embryos of E. coqui are compared to those of Xenopus laevis. The changes in gene expression are correlated with the embryonic changes in head structures including craniofacial cartilages and in particular, the cement gland. We have then examined inductive interactions involved in cement gland formation by interspecific transplants and recombinants. E. coqui embryos can generate signaling that culminates in cement gland formation, but E. coqui ectoderm appears to be incapable of a cement gland response. These results show here that inductive interactions in the anterior region of the E. coqui embryo have been modified during the evolution of direct development, and that changes in the competence of the E. coqui ectoderm may be responsible for the loss of certain tadpole-specific structures, such as cement gland.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]