2005
DOI: 10.1016/j.ydbio.2005.02.021
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Molecular evidence from Ciona intestinalis for the evolutionary origin of vertebrate sensory placodes

Abstract: Cranial sensory placodes are focused areas of the head ectoderm of vertebrates that contribute to the development of the cranial sense organs and their associated ganglia. Placodes have long been considered a key character of vertebrates, and their evolution is proposed to have been essential for the evolution of an active predatory lifestyle by early vertebrates. Despite their importance for understanding vertebrate origins, the evolutionary origin of placodes has remained obscure. Here, we use a panel of mol… Show more

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Cited by 161 publications
(150 citation statements)
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“…Because of the importance of synchronizing sexual maturation and reproductive behavior, the systems for collecting olfactory information, including sex pheromones, and for eliciting maturational and behavioral changes could have been anciently linked (Muske, 1993). Because ascidian pitx is not expressed in the part of the duct proximal to the brain and because vertebrate Pitx is eventually downregulated in the olfactory organ, Boorman and Shimeld (Boorman and Shimeld, 2002) tentatively proposed that the ascidian duct could be homologous to the olfactory component of a combined adenohypophyseal/olfactory organ; this hypothesis, similar to that of Burighel et al (Burighel et al, 1998), implies a conflation of organs in ascidians that is at odds with the separate olfactory and adenophypophyseal homologies that we propose in Oikopleura dioica and Mazet et al (Mazet et al, 2005) propose for ascidians.…”
Section: The Ciliary Funnel and The Vertebrate Pituitarysupporting
confidence: 58%
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“…Because of the importance of synchronizing sexual maturation and reproductive behavior, the systems for collecting olfactory information, including sex pheromones, and for eliciting maturational and behavioral changes could have been anciently linked (Muske, 1993). Because ascidian pitx is not expressed in the part of the duct proximal to the brain and because vertebrate Pitx is eventually downregulated in the olfactory organ, Boorman and Shimeld (Boorman and Shimeld, 2002) tentatively proposed that the ascidian duct could be homologous to the olfactory component of a combined adenohypophyseal/olfactory organ; this hypothesis, similar to that of Burighel et al (Burighel et al, 1998), implies a conflation of organs in ascidians that is at odds with the separate olfactory and adenophypophyseal homologies that we propose in Oikopleura dioica and Mazet et al (Mazet et al, 2005) propose for ascidians.…”
Section: The Ciliary Funnel and The Vertebrate Pituitarysupporting
confidence: 58%
“…The idea that a single organ served for both olfaction and hormone regulation in a chordate ancestor and that this organ split into separate olfactory and pituitary organs in vertebrates (Gorbman, 1995) is weakened by the existence of separate probable olfactory and adenohypophyseal organs in Oikopleura, and by the finding of Whitlock et al (Whitlock et al, 2003) that cells of the terminal nerve that produce GnRH (otherwise a hormone of the pituitary) are products of neural crest rather than the olfactory placode, as was originally thought. Mazet et al (Mazet et al, 2005) recently proposed that the ascidian palps might be an olfactory organ homolog, based on expression of eya and neuronal marker COE; it seems likely, on the basis of gene expression and topography, that the Oikopleura ventral organ placode is homologous to the ectoderm of the ascidian palps, although, unlike the larvacean ventral organ, no ciliated sensory cells have been identified on the palps. Other olfactory markers in non-vertebrate chordates should be analyzed to resolve these apparent differences among chordates.…”
Section: The Ventral Organ and The Vertebrate Olfactory Organmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…It is thus interesting to assess, whether RA signaling affects the development of these invertebrate tissues. Such tissues include, for example, the adhesive papillae (or palps) in the anteriormost general ectoderm of ascidians, which is thought to be homologous either to the vertebrate olfactory placode (Mazet et al, 2005) or to vertebrate cement and hatching glands (Manni et al, 2004). The vertebrate cement and hatching glands might not be placodes in a strict sense, because they do not share a common developmental origin with placodes (reviewed in Schlosser, 2005).…”
Section: Neural Crest Placodes and Their Derivativesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Comparative analyses of the expression patterns of endostyle genes (e.g., Tpo, Pax2/5/8,FoxE4,FoxQ1,FoxA, in amphioxus and ascidians help us to understand the evolutionary origin of the vertebrate thyroid (Kozmik et al, 1999;Ogasawara et al, 1999;Ristoratore et al, 1999;Venkatesh et al, 1999;Ogasawara, 2000;Murakami et al, 2001;Ogasawara and Satou, 2003;Sasaki et al, 2003;Hiruta et al, 2005;Mazet et al, 2005). Results show that a combinatorial code of molecular markers defines each zone of the endostyle across its dorsoventral axis (Hiruta et al, 2005).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%