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The origin of animal body plans: a view from fossil evidence and the regulatory genome

Douglas H. Erwin

2020Development137 citationsDOI

Abstract

The origins and the early evolution of multicellular animals required the exploitation of holozoan genomic regulatory elements and the acquisition of new regulatory tools. Comparative studies of metazoans and their relatives now allow reconstruction of the evolution of the metazoan regulatory genome, but the deep conservation of many genes has led to varied hypotheses about the morphology of early animals and the extent of developmental co-option. In this Review, I assess the emerging view that the early diversification of animals involved small organisms with diverse cell types, but largely lacking complex developmental patterning, which evolved independently in different bilaterian clades during the Cambrian Explosion.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyMulticellular organismEvolutionary biologyGenomeCladeDiversification (marketing strategy)Gene regulatory networkPhylogeneticsLineage (genetic)Body planBiological evolutionComparative genomicsGeneGenomicsGeneticsGene expressionBusinessMarketingMarine Invertebrate Physiology and EcologyProtist diversity and phylogenyMarine Biology and Ecology Research