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  1. Despite the devastating global impact of mosquito-borne illnesses on human health, very little is known about mosquito developmental biology. In this investigation, functional genetic analysis of embryonic sal...

    Authors: Chilinh Nguyen, Emily Andrews, Christy Le, Longhua Sun, Zeinab Annan, Anthony Clemons, David W Severson and Molly Duman-Scheel
    Citation: EvoDevo 2013 4:9
  2. Genes encoding TCP transcription factors, such as CYCLOIDEA-like (CYC-like) genes, are well known actors in the control of plant morphological development, particularly regarding the control of floral symmetry. D...

    Authors: Regine Claßen-Bockhoff, Raili Ruonala, Kester Bull-Hereñu, Neville Marchant and Victor A Albert
    Citation: EvoDevo 2013 4:8
  3. Morphological innovation is an elusive and fascinating concept in evolutionary biology. A novel structure may open up an array of possibilities for adaptation, and thus is fundamental to the evolution of compl...

    Authors: Barbara MI Vreede, Jeremy A Lynch, Siegfried Roth and Élio Sucena
    Citation: EvoDevo 2013 4:7
  4. On 12 February 1988 (by coincidence Charles Darwin’s birthday), a paper published in Science by Katherine Field, Rudy Raff, and colleagues presented the first credible molecular analysis of metazoan phylogeny bas...

    Authors: Maximilian J Telford
    Citation: EvoDevo 2013 4:5
  5. Arthropod and vertebrate appendages appear to have evolved via parallel co-option of a plesiomorphic gene regulatory network. Our previous work implies that annelids evolved unrelated appendage-forming mechani...

    Authors: Christopher J Winchell and David K Jacobs
    Citation: EvoDevo 2013 4:4
  6. The fish-tetrapod transition was one of the major events in vertebrate evolution and was enabled by many morphological changes. Although the transformation of paired fish fins into tetrapod limbs has been a ma...

    Authors: Catherine Anne Boisvert, Jean MP Joss and Per E Ahlberg
    Citation: EvoDevo 2013 4:3
  7. The biting edge of the primitive arthropod mandible consists of a biting incisor process and a crushing molar process. These structures are thought to be derived from a structure known as an endite but the pre...

    Authors: Joshua F Coulcher and Maximilian J Telford
    Citation: EvoDevo 2013 4:1
  8. In most eumetazoans studied so far, Hox genes determine the identity of structures along the main body axis. They are usually linked in genomic clusters and, in the case of the vertebrate embryo, are expressed wi...

    Authors: Juan Pascual-Anaya, Noritaka Adachi, Susana Álvarez, Shigeru Kuratani, Salvatore D’Aniello and Jordi Garcia-Fernàndez
    Citation: EvoDevo 2012 3:28
  9. Digital anatomical atlases are increasingly used in order to depict different gene expression patterns and neuronal morphologies within a standardized reference template. In evo-devo, a discipline in which the...

    Authors: Albina Asadulina, Aurora Panzera, Csaba Verasztó, Christian Liebig and Gáspár Jékely
    Citation: EvoDevo 2012 3:27
  10. The Hawaiian endemic genus Clermonti a (Campanulaceae) includes 22 species, 15 of which, the double-corolla species, are characterized by an extra whorl of organs that appear to be true petals occupying what is n...

    Authors: Katherine A Hofer, Raili Ruonala and Victor A Albert
    Citation: EvoDevo 2012 3:26
  11. Animals with a spiral cleavage program, such as mollusks and annelids, make up the majority of the superphylum Lophotrochozoa. The great diversity of larval and adult body plans in this group emerges from this...

    Authors: Deirdre C Lyons, Kimberly J Perry, Maryna P Lesoway and Jonathan Q Henry
    Citation: EvoDevo 2012 3:21
  12. Variation in fruit morphology is important for plant fitness because it influences dispersal capabilities. Approximately half the members of tribe Brassiceae (Brassicaceae) exhibit fruits with segmentation and...

    Authors: Mariano Avino, Elena M Kramer, Kathleen Donohue, Alexander J Hammel and Jocelyn C Hall
    Citation: EvoDevo 2012 3:20
  13. The gastrula stage represents the point in development at which the three primary germ layers diverge. At this point the gene regulatory networks that specify the germ layers are established and the genes that...

    Authors: Roy Vaughn, Nancy Garnhart, James R Garey, W Kelley Thomas and Brian T Livingston
    Citation: EvoDevo 2012 3:19
  14. The mechanisms by which the conserved genetic “toolkit” for development generates phenotypic disparity across metazoans is poorly understood. Echinoderm larvae provide a great resource for understanding how de...

    Authors: Brenna S McCauley, Erin P Wright, Cameron Exner, Chisato Kitazawa and Veronica F Hinman
    Citation: EvoDevo 2012 3:17
  15. Talpid moles show many specializations in their adult skeleton linked to fossoriality, including enlarged hands when compared to the feet. Heterochrony in developmental mechanisms is hypothesized to account fo...

    Authors: Constanze Bickelmann, Christian Mitgutsch, Michael K Richardson, Rafael Jiménez, Merijn AG de Bakker and Marcelo R Sánchez-Villagra
    Citation: EvoDevo 2012 3:16
  16. Intercellular signaling via the Notch pathway regulates cell fate, patterning, differentiation and proliferation, and is essential for the proper development of bilaterians and cnidarians. To investigate the o...

    Authors: Gemma S Richards and Bernard M Degnan
    Citation: EvoDevo 2012 3:15
  17. Sox genes are HMG-domain containing transcription factors with important roles in developmental processes in animals; many of them appear to have conserved functions among eumetazoans. Demosponges have fewer S...

    Authors: Sofia Fortunato, Marcin Adamski, Brith Bergum, Corina Guder, Signe Jordal, Sven Leininger, Christin Zwafink, Hans Tore Rapp and Maja Adamska
    Citation: EvoDevo 2012 3:14
  18. In the polychaete Platynereis, the primordial germ cells (PGCs) emerge from the vasa, piwi, and PL10 expressing mesodermal posterior growth zone (MPGZ) at the end of larval development, suggesting a post-embryoni...

    Authors: Nicole Rebscher, Anika Kristin Lidke and Christian Friedrich Ackermann
    Citation: EvoDevo 2012 3:9
  19. Annelids and arthropods each possess a segmented body. Whether this similarity represents an evolutionary convergence or inheritance from a common segmented ancestor is the subject of ongoing investigation.

    Authors: Elaine C Seaver, Emi Yamaguchi, Gemma S Richards and Néva P Meyer
    Citation: EvoDevo 2012 3:8
  20. Flatworm embryology has attracted attention since the early beginnings of comparative evolutionary biology. Considered for a long time the most basal bilaterians, the Platyhelminthes (excluding Acoelomorpha) a...

    Authors: José María Martín-Durán and Bernhard Egger
    Citation: EvoDevo 2012 3:7
  21. Larval features such as the apical organ, apical ciliary tuft, and ciliated bands often complicate the evaluation of hypotheses regarding the origin of the adult bilaterian nervous system. Understanding how ne...

    Authors: Scott Santagata, Carlee Resh, Andreas Hejnol, Mark Q Martindale and Yale J Passamaneck
    Citation: EvoDevo 2012 3:3
  22. Here we provide the most comprehensive study to date on the cranial ossification sequence in Lipotyphla, the group which includes shrews, moles and hedgehogs. This unique group, which encapsulates diverse ecol...

    Authors: Daisuke Koyabu, Hideki Endo, Christian Mitgutsch, Gen Suwa, Kenneth C Catania, Christoph PE Zollikofer, Sen-ichi Oda, Kazuhiko Koyasu, Motokazu Ando and Marcelo R Sánchez-Villagra
    Citation: EvoDevo 2011 2:21
  23. RNAs for embryo patterning and for germ cell specification are localized to the vegetal cortex of the oocyte of Xenopus laevis. In oocytes of the direct developing frog Eleutherodactylus coqui, orthologous RNAs f...

    Authors: Richard P Elinson, Michelle C Sabo, Cara Fisher, Takeshi Yamaguchi, Hidefumi Orii and Kimberly Nath
    Citation: EvoDevo 2011 2:20
  24. Reptiles are largely under-represented in comparative genomics despite the fact that they are substantially more diverse in many respects than mammals. Given the high divergence of reptiles from classical mode...

    Authors: Athanasia C Tzika, Raphaël Helaers, Gerrit Schramm and Michel C Milinkovitch
    Citation: EvoDevo 2011 2:19
  25. Nematodes can be subdivided into basal Enoplea (clades 1 and 2) and more derived Chromadorea (clades 3 to 12). Embryogenesis of Caenorhabditis elegans (clade 9) has been analyzed in most detail. Their establishme...

    Authors: Jens Schulze and Einhard Schierenberg
    Citation: EvoDevo 2011 2:18
  26. As whole genome and transcriptome sequencing gets cheaper and faster, a great number of 'exotic' animal models are emerging, rapidly adding valuable data to the ever-expanding Evo-Devo field. All these new org...

    Authors: Mattias Ormestad, Mark Q Martindale and Eric Röttinger
    Citation: EvoDevo 2011 2:17
  27. MicroRNAs are small noncoding RNAs regulating expression of protein coding genes at post-transcriptional level and controlling several biological processes. At present microRNAs have been identified in various...

    Authors: Simona Candiani, Luca Moronti, Davide De Pietri Tonelli, Greta Garbarino and Mario Pestarino
    Citation: EvoDevo 2011 2:15
  28. A number of innovations underlie the origin of rapid reproductive cycles in angiosperms. A critical early step involved the modification of an ancestrally short and slow-growing pollen tube for faster and long...

    Authors: Jason M Abercrombie, Brian C O'Meara, Andrew R Moffatt and Joseph H Williams
    Citation: EvoDevo 2011 2:14
  29. Bryozoa is a clade of aquatic protostomes. The bryozoan life cycle typically comprises a larval stage, which metamorphoses into a sessile adult that proliferates by asexual budding to form colonies. The homolo...

    Authors: Judith Fuchs, Mark Q Martindale and Andreas Hejnol
    Citation: EvoDevo 2011 2:13
  30. The Sox genes are important regulators of animal development belonging to the HMG domain-containing class of transcription factors. Studies in bilaterian models have notably highlighted their pivotal role in cont...

    Authors: Muriel Jager, Eric Quéinnec, Hervé Le Guyader and Michaël Manuel
    Citation: EvoDevo 2011 2:12
  31. Mammals as a rule have seven cervical vertebrae, except for sloths and manatees. Bateson proposed that the change in the number of cervical vertebrae in sloths is due to homeotic transformations. A recent hypo...

    Authors: Irma Varela-Lasheras, Alexander J Bakker, Steven D van der Mije, Johan AJ Metz, Joris van Alphen and Frietson Galis
    Citation: EvoDevo 2011 2:11

    The Correction to this article has been published in EvoDevo 2021 12:13