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Feb 2003
ISBN 0262134195
368 pp.
62 illus.
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Origination of Organismal Form
Gerd B. Müller and Stuart A. Newman
The field of evolutionary biology arose from the desire to understand the origin and diversity of biological forms. In recent years, however, evolutionary genetics, with its focus on the modification and inheritance of presumed genetic programs, has all but overwhelmed other aspects of evolutionary biology. This has led to the neglect of the study of the generative origins of biological form.

Drawing on work from developmental biology, paleontology, developmental and population genetics, cancer research, physics, and theoretical biology, this book explores the multiple factors responsible for the origination of biological form. It examines the essential problems of morphological evolution--why, for example, the basic body plans of nearly all metazoans arose within a relatively short time span, why similar morphological design motifs appear in phylogenetically independent lineages, and how new structural elements are added to the body plan of a given phylogenetic lineage. It also examines discordances between genetic and phenotypic change, the physical determinants of morphogenesis, and the role of epigenetic processes in evolution. The book discusses these and other topics within the framework of evolutionary developmental biology, a new research agenda that concerns the interaction of development and evolution in the generation of biological form. By placing epigenetic processes, rather than gene sequence and gene expression changes, at the center of morphological origination, this book points the way to a more comprehensive theory of evolution.
Table of Contents
 Series Forward
 Preface
I Introduction
1 Origination of Organismal Form: The Forgotten Cause in Evolutionary Theory
by Gerd B. Müller and Stuart A. Newman
II Problems of Morphological Evolution
2 The Cambrian "Explosion" of Metazoans
by Simon Conway Morris
3 Convergence and Homoplasy in the Evolution of Organismal Form
by Pat Willmer
4 Homology: The Evolution of Morphological Organization
by Gerd B. Müller
III Relationships Between Genes and Form
5 Only Details Determine
by Roy J. Britten
6 The Reactive Genome
by Scott F. Gilbert
7 Tissue Specificity: Structural Cues Allow Diverse Phenotypes from a Constant Genotype
by Mina J. Bissell, I. Saira Mian, Derek Readisky, and Eva Turley
8 Genes, Cell Behavior, and the Evolution of Form
by Ellen Larsen
IV Physical Determinants of Morphogenesis
9 Cell Adhesive Interactions and Tissue Self-Organization
by Malcom Steinberg
10 Gradients, Diffusion, and Genes in Pattern Formation
by H. Frederik Nijhout
10 A Biochemical Oscillator Linked to Vertebrate Segmentation
by Oliver Pourquié
12 Organization through Intra-Inter Dynamics
by Kunihiko Kaneko
13 From Physics to Development: The Evolution of Morphogenetic Mechanisms
by Stuart A. Newman
V Origination and Evolvability
14 Phenotypic Plasticity and Evolution by Genetic Assimilation
by Vidyanand Nanjundiah
15 Genetic and Epigenetic Factors in the Origin of the Tetrapod Limb
by Gunter P. Wagner and Chi-hua Chiu
16 Epigenesis and Evolution of Brains: From Embryonic Divisions to Functional Systems
by Georg F. Striedter
17 Boundary Constraints for the Emergence of Form
by Diego Rasskin-Gutman
 Contributors
 Index
 
 


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