Litcius/Paper detail

Evidence of five digits in embryonic horses and developmental stabilization of tetrapod digit number

Kathryn D. Kavanagh, C. Scott Bailey, Karen E. Sears

2020Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Previous work comparing the developmental mechanisms involved in digit reduction in horses with other mammals reported that horses have only a ‘single digit', with two flanking metapodials identified as remnants of digit II and IV. Here we show that early Equus embryos go through a stage with five digit condensations, and that the flanking splint metapodials result from fusions of the two anterior digits I and II and the two posterior digits IV and V, in a striking parallel between ontogeny and phylogeny. Given that even this most extreme case of digit reduction exhibits primary pentadactyly, we re-examined the initial stages of digit condensation of all digit-reduced tetrapods where data are available and found that in all cases, five or four digits initiate (four with digit I missing). The persistent pentadactyl initiation in the horse and other digit-reduced modern taxa underscores a durable developmental stability at the initiation of digits. The digit evodevo model may help illuminate the biological circumstances under which organ systems become highly stabilized versus highly plastic.

Topics & Concepts

Numerical digitTetrapod (structure)BiologyOntogenyEquusAnatomyEvolutionary biologyArithmeticZoologyGeneticsMathematicsPaleontologyGenetic and Clinical Aspects of Sex Determination and Chromosomal AbnormalitiesPaleontology and Evolutionary BiologyChromosomal and Genetic Variations