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Developmental basis of evolutionary lung loss in plethodontid salamanders.

Zachary R LewisRyan R KerneyJames Hanken
Published in: Science advances (2022)
One or more members of four living amphibian clades have independently dispensed with pulmonary respiration and lack lungs, but little is known of the developmental basis of lung loss in any taxon. We use morphological, molecular, and experimental approaches to examine the Plethodontidae, a dominant family of salamanders, all of which are lungless as adults. We confirm an early anecdotal report that plethodontids complete early stages of lung morphogenesis: Transient embryonic lung primordia form but regress by apoptosis before hatching. Initiation of pulmonary development coincides with expression of the lung-specification gene Wnt2b in adjacent mesoderm, and the lung rudiment expresses pulmonary markers Nkx2.1 and Sox9 . Lung developmental-genetic pathways are at least partially conserved despite the absence of functional adult lungs for at least 25 and possibly exceeding 60 million years. Adult lung loss appears associated with altered expression of signaling molecules that mediate later stages of tracheal and pulmonary development.
Keyphrases
  • pulmonary hypertension
  • stem cells
  • poor prognosis
  • oxidative stress
  • transcription factor
  • gene expression
  • young adults
  • dna methylation
  • subarachnoid hemorrhage