Evolutionary change in animal morphology results from alteration of the functional organization of the gene regulatory networks (GRNs) that control development of the body plan. A major mechanism of evolutionary change in GRN structure is alteration of cis-regulatory modules that determine regulatory gene expression. Here we consider the causes and consequences of GRN evolution. Although some GRN subcircuits are of great antiquity, other aspects are highly flexible and thus in any given genome more recent. This mosaic view of the evolution of GRN structure explains major aspects of evolutionary process, such as hierarchical phylogeny and discontinuities of paleontological change
<p>As development proceeds, cells acquire specialized properties and functions that are critical for...
Sea stars and sea urchins evolved from a last common ancestor that lived at the end of the Cambrian,...
The insight that the genomic control of developmental process is encoded in the form of gene regulat...
Evolutionary change in animal morphology results from alteration of the functional organization of t...
Evolutionary change in animal morphology results from alteration of the functional organization of t...
At present several entirely different explanatory approaches compete to illuminate the mechanisms by...
Comparative developmental evidence indicates that reorganizations in developmental gene regulatory n...
AbstractAt present several entirely different explanatory approaches compete to illuminate the mecha...
The molecular and genetic basis for the evolution of anatomical diversity is a major question that h...
Gene regulatory networks (GRNs) provide system level explanations of developmental and physiological...
Development of the animal body plan is controlled by large gene regulatory networks (GRNs), and henc...
AbstractAn open question in animal evolution is why the phylum- and superphylum-level body plans hav...
Gene regulatory networks (GRNs) offer an unprecedented view on the genomic control of developmental ...
The development of multicellular organisms involves the partitioning of the organism into territorie...
Convergent phenotypic evolution is often caused by recurrent changes at particular nodes in the unde...
<p>As development proceeds, cells acquire specialized properties and functions that are critical for...
Sea stars and sea urchins evolved from a last common ancestor that lived at the end of the Cambrian,...
The insight that the genomic control of developmental process is encoded in the form of gene regulat...
Evolutionary change in animal morphology results from alteration of the functional organization of t...
Evolutionary change in animal morphology results from alteration of the functional organization of t...
At present several entirely different explanatory approaches compete to illuminate the mechanisms by...
Comparative developmental evidence indicates that reorganizations in developmental gene regulatory n...
AbstractAt present several entirely different explanatory approaches compete to illuminate the mecha...
The molecular and genetic basis for the evolution of anatomical diversity is a major question that h...
Gene regulatory networks (GRNs) provide system level explanations of developmental and physiological...
Development of the animal body plan is controlled by large gene regulatory networks (GRNs), and henc...
AbstractAn open question in animal evolution is why the phylum- and superphylum-level body plans hav...
Gene regulatory networks (GRNs) offer an unprecedented view on the genomic control of developmental ...
The development of multicellular organisms involves the partitioning of the organism into territorie...
Convergent phenotypic evolution is often caused by recurrent changes at particular nodes in the unde...
<p>As development proceeds, cells acquire specialized properties and functions that are critical for...
Sea stars and sea urchins evolved from a last common ancestor that lived at the end of the Cambrian,...
The insight that the genomic control of developmental process is encoded in the form of gene regulat...