The three major taxa with metameric segmentation (annelids, arthropods, and chordates) appear to use three very different molecular strategies to generate segments. However, unexpected similarities are starting to emerge from characterization of pair-rule patterning and segmental border formation. Moreover, the existence of an ancestral segmentation clock based on Notch signaling has become likely. An old concept of comparative anatomy, the enterocoele theory, is compatible with a single origin of segmentation mechanisms and could therefore provide a conceptual framework for assessing these molecular similarities
Segments are repeated elements along the main body axis of many animals, such as the rings of earthw...
SYNOPSIS. The idea that the last common ancestor of bilaterian animals (Urbilateria) was segmented h...
Data on the molecular and genetic basis of animal development, and on genome sequences, have been ch...
The three major taxa with metameric segmentation (annelids, arthropods, and chordates) appear to use...
AbstractThe three major taxa with metameric segmentation (annelids, arthropods, and chordates) appea...
ABSTRACT Understanding the evolutionary origins of segmented body plans in the metazoa has been a lo...
In the animal kingdom, only the annelids, arthropods and chordates are segmented. Whether the common...
Annelida is one of the three phyla presenting a segmented body plan, composed of repeated morphologi...
AbstractThe origin of animal segmentation, the periodic repetition of anatomical structures along th...
Segmentation is a feature of the body plans of a number of diverse animal groupings, including the a...
Modular body organization is found widely across multicellular organisms, and some of them form repe...
There is now compelling evidence that many arthropods pattern their segments using a clock-and-wavef...
AbstractRecent work has revealed striking similarities in the genetic mechanisms underpinning somito...
Segmentation is the partitioning of the body axis into a series of repeating units or segments. This...
Segments are repeated elements along the main body axis of many animals, such as the rings of earthw...
Segments are repeated elements along the main body axis of many animals, such as the rings of earthw...
SYNOPSIS. The idea that the last common ancestor of bilaterian animals (Urbilateria) was segmented h...
Data on the molecular and genetic basis of animal development, and on genome sequences, have been ch...
The three major taxa with metameric segmentation (annelids, arthropods, and chordates) appear to use...
AbstractThe three major taxa with metameric segmentation (annelids, arthropods, and chordates) appea...
ABSTRACT Understanding the evolutionary origins of segmented body plans in the metazoa has been a lo...
In the animal kingdom, only the annelids, arthropods and chordates are segmented. Whether the common...
Annelida is one of the three phyla presenting a segmented body plan, composed of repeated morphologi...
AbstractThe origin of animal segmentation, the periodic repetition of anatomical structures along th...
Segmentation is a feature of the body plans of a number of diverse animal groupings, including the a...
Modular body organization is found widely across multicellular organisms, and some of them form repe...
There is now compelling evidence that many arthropods pattern their segments using a clock-and-wavef...
AbstractRecent work has revealed striking similarities in the genetic mechanisms underpinning somito...
Segmentation is the partitioning of the body axis into a series of repeating units or segments. This...
Segments are repeated elements along the main body axis of many animals, such as the rings of earthw...
Segments are repeated elements along the main body axis of many animals, such as the rings of earthw...
SYNOPSIS. The idea that the last common ancestor of bilaterian animals (Urbilateria) was segmented h...
Data on the molecular and genetic basis of animal development, and on genome sequences, have been ch...