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1 June 2016 What are Head Cavities? — A History of Studies on Vertebrate Head Segmentation
Shigeru Kuratani, Noritaka Adachi
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Abstract

Motivated by the discovery of segmental epithelial coeloms, or “head cavities,” in elasmobranch embryos toward the end of the 19th century, the debate over the presence of mesodermal segments in the vertebrate head became a central problem in comparative embryology. The classical segmental view assumed only one type of metamerism in the vertebrate head, in which each metamere was thought to contain one head somite and one pharyngeal arch, innervated by a set of cranial nerves serially homologous to dorsal and ventral roots of spinal nerves. The non-segmental view, on the other hand, rejected the somite-like properties of head cavities. A series of small mesodermal cysts in early Torpedo embryos, which were thought to represent true somite homologs, provided a third possible view on the nature of the vertebrate head. Recent molecular developmental data have shed new light on the vertebrate head problem, explaining that head mesoderm evolved, not by the modification of rostral somites of an amphioxus-like ancestor, but through the polarization of unspecified paraxial mesoderm into head mesoderm anteriorly and trunk somites posteriorly.

© 2016 Zoological Society of Japan
Shigeru Kuratani and Noritaka Adachi "What are Head Cavities? — A History of Studies on Vertebrate Head Segmentation," Zoological Science 33(3), 213-228, (1 June 2016). https://doi.org/10.2108/zs150181
Received: 30 October 2015; Accepted: 18 February 2016; Published: 1 June 2016
KEYWORDS
embryo
evolution
head cavities
head segmentation
mesoderm
vertebrates
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