Neural Crest and the Origin of Vertebrates: A New Head
- 15 April 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 220 (4594), 268-273
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.220.4594.268
Abstract
Most of the morphological and functional differences between vertebrates and other chordates occur in the head and are derived embryologically from muscularized hypomere, neural crest, and epidermal (neurogenic) placodes. In the head, the neural crest functions as mesoderm and forms connective, skeletal, and muscular tissue. Both the neural crest and the epidermal placodes form special sense organs and other neural structures. These structures may be homologous to portions of the epidermal nerve plexus of protochordates. The transition to vertebrates apparently was associated with a shift from a passive to an active mode of predation, so that many of the features occurring only in vertebrates became concentrated in the head.Keywords
This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- Analysis of glial cell differentiation in peripheral nervous tissueDevelopmental Biology, 1982
- Evolution of patterns of gene expression in Hawaiian picture-wingedDrosophilaJournal of Molecular Evolution, 1980
- The control of avian cephalic neural crest cytodifferentiationDevelopmental Biology, 1978
- The control of avian cephalic neural crest cytodifferentiationDevelopmental Biology, 1978
- The early migration of neural crest cells in the trunk region of the avian embryo: An electron microscopic studyDevelopmental Biology, 1978
- An analysis of the migratory behavior of avian cephalic neural crest cellsDevelopmental Biology, 1975
- The Origin of the ChordatesActa Zoologica, 1973
- Calcified tissues in the earliest vertebratesCalcified Tissue International, 1969
- A peculiar mode of muscular innervation in amphioxus. Light and electron microscopic studies of the so‐called ventral rootsJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1966
- The Roles of Motile Larvae and Fixed Adults in the Origin of the VertebratesThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 1946