2017
DOI: 10.1111/joa.12687
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The vertebrate heart: an evolutionary perspective

Abstract: Convergence is the tendency of independent species to evolve similarly when subjected to the same environmental conditions. The primitive blueprint for the circulatory system emerged around 700-600 Mya and exhibits diverse physiological adaptations across the radiations of vertebrates (Subphylum Vertebrata, Phylum Chordata). It has evolved from the early chordate circulatory system with a single layered tube in the tunicate (Subphylum Urchordata) or an amphioxus (Subphylum Cephalochordata), to a vertebrate cir… Show more

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Cited by 65 publications
(62 citation statements)
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References 67 publications
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“…(b) Selected features of the turquoise killifish that are conserved in human and vertebrate canonical research organisms (zebrafish and house mouse), but are missing in invertebrate canonical research organisms (round worm and fruit fly). References: nervous system: Shimeld and Holland (2000), Freeman and Doherty (2006); Lohr and Hammerschmidt (2011), Oikonomou and Shaham (2011), immune system: Langenau and Zon (2005), Engelmann and Pujol (2010), Buchon, Silverman and Cherry ( 2014); circulatory system: Lehmacher, Abeln and Paululat ( 2012); Stephenson, Adams and Vaccarezza ( 2017); respiratory system: Schottenfeld, Song and Ghabrial ( 2010); skeletal system: Shimeld and Holland (2000); muscular system: Moerman and Williams (2006), Demontis, Piccirillo, Goldberg and Perrimon ( 2013), Piccirillo, Demontis, Perrimon and Goldberg ( 2014), Goody, Carter, Kilroy, Maves and Henry ( 2017); digestive system: McKay, McKay, Avery and Graff ( 2003), Arrese and Soulages (2010), Hashmi et al. ( 2013), Kuraishi, Hori and Kurata ( 2013), Lemaitre and Miguel‐Aliaga (2013), McGhee (2013), Ritter et al.…”
Section: Research Organisms For Agingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…(b) Selected features of the turquoise killifish that are conserved in human and vertebrate canonical research organisms (zebrafish and house mouse), but are missing in invertebrate canonical research organisms (round worm and fruit fly). References: nervous system: Shimeld and Holland (2000), Freeman and Doherty (2006); Lohr and Hammerschmidt (2011), Oikonomou and Shaham (2011), immune system: Langenau and Zon (2005), Engelmann and Pujol (2010), Buchon, Silverman and Cherry ( 2014); circulatory system: Lehmacher, Abeln and Paululat ( 2012); Stephenson, Adams and Vaccarezza ( 2017); respiratory system: Schottenfeld, Song and Ghabrial ( 2010); skeletal system: Shimeld and Holland (2000); muscular system: Moerman and Williams (2006), Demontis, Piccirillo, Goldberg and Perrimon ( 2013), Piccirillo, Demontis, Perrimon and Goldberg ( 2014), Goody, Carter, Kilroy, Maves and Henry ( 2017); digestive system: McKay, McKay, Avery and Graff ( 2003), Arrese and Soulages (2010), Hashmi et al. ( 2013), Kuraishi, Hori and Kurata ( 2013), Lemaitre and Miguel‐Aliaga (2013), McGhee (2013), Ritter et al.…”
Section: Research Organisms For Agingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The differentiation of the precardiac mesoderm in an evolutionary context is driven by interactions between a restricted set of genes. A handful of orthologues (Nkx2.5/Tinman, GATA 4/5/6/Pannier, Hand1/2, Tbx5, Mef2c) in mesodermal precardiac tissues are referred to F I G U R E 1 Phylogenetic relationships to demonstrate the position of arthropods, mollusks, and chordates among the bilaterians and metazoan (After 9 ) as "heart regulatory kernel" 11,22,23 or "core cardiac transcription factors," 24 followed by various sets of "terminal selectors" 25 or "patterning genes," 24 with very different outcomes in ascidians and vertebrates, 26 which can be extended to other taxa such as insects and mollusks. 27 In arthropods, the various types of circulation have recently been described.…”
Section: Cardiac Precursorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Amniote hearts in crocodiles, birds, and mammals consist of a four-chambered heart with two atria and two ventricles (Stephenson et al, 2017). The right ventricle is a newly acquired component of the four-chambered heart and is thought to originate from the proximal part of the conus arteriosus.…”
Section: Ra Signaling In Coronary Vessel Maturationmentioning
confidence: 99%