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Central Role for the Lens in Cave Fish Eye Degeneration
Yoshiyuki Yamamoto,William R. Jeffery*
Astyanax mexicanus is a teleost with eyed
surface-dwelling and eyeless cave-dwelling forms. Eye formation is
initiated incave fish embryos, but the eye subsequently arrests and
degenerates.The surface fish lens stimulates growth and development
aftertransplantation into the cave fish optic cup, restoring optictissues lost during cave fish evolution. Conversely, eye growthand
development are retarded following transplantation of a surfacefish
lens into a cave fish optic cup or lens extirpation. Theseresults show
that evolutionary changes in an inductive signalfrom the lens are
involved in cave fish eye degeneration.
Department of Biology, University of Maryland, College Park, MD
20742-4415, USA.
*
To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail:
wj33{at}umail.umd.edu
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G. A. Wray, M. W. Hahn, E. Abouheif, J. P. Balhoff, M. Pizer, M. V. Rockman, and L. A. Romano (2003)
Mol. Biol. Evol.
20, 1377-1419
|Abstract »|Full Text »|PDF »
To See or Not to See: Evolution of Eye Degeneration in Mexican Blind Cavefish.
W. R. Jeffery, A. G. Strickler, and Y. Yamamoto (2003)
Integr. Comp. Biol.
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