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14 Publications

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    03/01/99 | The developmental basis for allometry in insects.
    Stern DL, Emlen DJ
    Development. 1999 Mar;126(6):1091-101

    Within all species of animals, the size of each organ bears a specific relationship to overall body size. These patterns of organ size relative to total body size are called static allometry and have enchanted biologists for centuries, yet the mechanisms generating these patterns have attracted little experimental study. We review recent and older work on holometabolous insect development that sheds light on these mechanisms. In insects, static allometry can be divided into at least two processes: (1) the autonomous specification of organ identity, perhaps including the approximate size of the organ, and (2) the determination of the final size of organs based on total body size. We present three models to explain the second process: (1) all organs autonomously absorb nutrients and grow at organ-specific rates, (2) a centralized system measures a close correlate of total body size and distributes this information to all organs, and (3) autonomous organ growth is combined with feedback between growing organs to modulate final sizes. We provide evidence supporting models 2 and 3 and also suggest that hormones are the messengers of size information. Advances in our understanding of the mechanisms of allometry will come through the integrated study of whole tissues using techniques from development, genetics, endocrinology and population biology.

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    Truman LabRiddiford Lab
    09/30/99 | The origins of insect metamorphosis.
    Truman JW, Riddiford LM
    Nature. 1999 Sep 30;401:447-52. doi: 10.1038/46737

    Insect metamorphosis is a fascinating and highly successful biological adaptation, but there is much uncertainty as to how it evolved. Ancestral insect species did not undergo metamorphosis and there are still some existing species that lack metamorphosis or undergo only partial metamorphosis. Based on endocrine studies and morphological comparisons of the development of insect species with and without metamorphosis, a novel hypothesis for the evolution of metamorphosis is proposed. Changes in the endocrinology of development are central to this hypothesis. The three stages of the ancestral insect species-pronymph, nymph and adult-are proposed to be equivalent to the larva, pupa and adult stages of insects with complete metamorphosis. This proposal has general implications for insect developmental biology.

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    01/01/99 | Visualization of large-scale chromatin structure and dynamics using the lac operator/lac repressor reporter system.
    Belmont AS, Li G, Sudlow G, Robinett C
    Methods in Cell Biology. 1999;58:203-22
    12/11/99 | Y do we drink?
    Tecott LH, Heberlein U
    Cell. 1998 Dec 11;95(6):733-5