Lecture Notes for Monday, April 16 |
MetamorphosisYouTube video linkTadpole ----> Frogs & toads 1* Self-destruction of tail - Apoptosis
Experiment in which an eye was grafted onto the tail
2* Formation of legs
3* Change in retina: different light-detecting pigment
4* Movement of eyeballs to more anterior location 5* Formation of lungs 6* Degeneration of gills 7* Changed hemoglobin; different cells blood-producing stem cells for breathing air 8* Kidney changes - adult uses urea instead of ammonia 9* loss of lateral line system 10* Digestive tract herbivorous--> carnivorous (shorter in length) 11* Skin thicker epidermis and dermis -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Important that these changes occur in the right sequence: "Don't destroy your tail until you have formed your new legs"
Threshold theory maybe an over-simplification --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Stimulation of amphibian metamorphosis by thyroxine : The thyroid gland evolved from a mucus-secreting groove in primitive chordates, which then became separated from the floor of the throat. For example, sea squirts are filter-feeders that blow water out through their gill slits and capture food in the mucus. Thyroxine is made from mucus inside epithelial spheres; covalent binding of iodine to tyrosines + binding of pairs of tyrosine. This polymerization occurs in the mucus inside the epithelial spheres. ? related to evolution of thyroid from the mucus-secreting gland used for filter-feeding by sea squirts and larval lampreys -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Salamanders also have larvae, with legs, that undergo metamorphosis, in a sub-group of salamanders called newts (common in this area: more in New England; very poisonous skin) Larva -> Eft --> Newt -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Neoteny - Axolotl Reach sexual maturity and breed when anatomically still larvae. Treating axolotls with thyroxin can force metamorphosis into something similar to a spotted salamader. There are also some neotenic species of sea squirts. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Also there are species of frogs and salamanders with "direct development", where the egg develops directly into an animal with legs. These live in areas where there isn't enough fresh water for a tadpole stage to survive. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Invertebrate examples of metamorphosis I) Ammocoetes larva ---> Lamprey II) Sea Squirt "tadpole" ----> Sea Squirt III) Pluteus ----> Sea urchin (and star-fish, etc.) IV) Sponges have a swimming larval form, whose cells then rearrange to form a sponge (in which cells keep on rearranging forever) V) Trochophore larvae, Pilidium larva, and several other planktonic larvae VI) Larvae of barnacles look like shrimp, etc. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- VII) Caterpillar ----> ----> ----> Butterfly, or moth Maggot ----> ----> ----> fly grasshopper -> grasshopper -> grasshopper -> grasshopper -> grasshopper silverfish -> silverfish -> silverfish-> -> silverfish -> silverfish
Metamorphosis by molting (shedding outer layer of skin) All arthropods molt. Some insects have a metamorphic molt. The new body surface is made by differentiation of imaginal discs. Hormonal control of arthropod molting
Juvenile hormone (a lipid) inhibits metamorphosis
Precor - chemical name methoprene - analog of juvenile hormone Eliminates fleas by preventing them from going through metamorphosis to become breeding adults *****************************************
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