Goldfish morphology as a model for evolutionary developmental biology

TitelGoldfish morphology as a model for evolutionary developmental biology
MedientypJournal Article
Jahr der Veröffentlichung2016
AutorenOta, K. G., and G. Abe
JournalWIREs Developmental BiologyWIREs Developmental Biology
Volume5
Problem3
Seitennummerierung272 - 295
Veröffentlichungsdatum2016
ISB Nummer1759-7684
Zusammenfassung

Morphological variation of the goldfish is known to have been established by artificial selection for ornamental purposes during the domestication process. Chinese texts that date to the Song dynasty contain descriptions of goldfish breeding for ornamental purposes, indicating that the practice originated over one thousand years ago. Such a well-documented goldfish breeding process, combined with the phylogenetic and embryological proximities of this species with zebrafish, would appear to make the morphologically diverse goldfish strains suitable models for evolutionary developmental (evodevo) studies. However, few modern evodevo studies of goldfish have been conducted. In this review, we provide an overview of the historical background of goldfish breeding, and the differences between this teleost and zebrafish from an evolutionary perspective. We also summarize recent progress in the field of molecular developmental genetics, with a particular focus on the twin-tail goldfish morphology. Furthermore, we discuss unanswered questions relating to the evolution of the genome, developmental robustness, and morphologies in the goldfish lineage, with the goal of blazing a path toward an evodevo study paradigm using this teleost species as a new model species. WIREs Dev Biol 2016, 5:272?295. doi: 10.1002/wdev.224 This article is categorized under: Early Embryonic Development > Development to the Basic Body Plan Comparative Development and Evolution > Model Systems Comparative Development and Evolution > Evolutionary Novelties

URLhttps://doi.org/10.1002/wdev.224



'Es spielt keine Rolle, wie schön deine Theorie ist. Es spielt keine Rolle, wie klug du bist. Passt sie nicht zu den experimentellen Ergebnissen/Beobachtungen, dann ist sie falsch!'. {nach Richard Feynman, Nobelpreis für Physik 1965}