[Dragaera] Boing!
Davdi Silverrock
davdisil at gmail.com
Thu Sep 7 22:52:29 PDT 2006
On 9/7/06, Davdi Silverrock wrote:
> On 9/7/06, Philip Hart wrote:
> >
> > We've got some fly wing-making genes iirc, but ...
> >
>
> I'm 99.9% sure we don't.
>
> That is, I'm pretty sure that the lineage of vertebrates split off
> from all other invertebrate lineages long before flies evolved wings.
Supporting reference:
http://tolweb.org/Bilateria/2459
Note that Deuterostomia (which includes chordata (vertebrates)) is a
parallel lineage to Ecdysozoa (which includes arthropoda (includes
insects)), not a descendant (damn, there's that word again) lineage.
>
> Perhaps you are thinking of Hox genes being amazingly strongly
> conserved in all animal lineages? I think that if mammalian Hox is
> transposed to flies, the flies still develop wings normally. But Hox
> is regulatory; it doesn't actually code for wing development itself.
>
Supporting reference:
[begin cite]
Biologists discovered that the Hox genes did the same job in all of
these animals: specifying different sections of their head-to-tail
axis, just as they do in insects.
Hox genes in these different animals are so similar that scientists
can replace a defective Hox gene in a fruit fly with the corresponding
Hox gene from a mouse, and the fly will still grow its proper body
parts. Even though mice and fruit flies diverged from a common
ancestor more than 600 million years ago, the gene can still exert its
power.
[end cite] (/Evolution: The Triumph of an Idea/, by Carl Zimmer, pg 121)
More information about the Dragaera
mailing list