The European Zoological Journal (Jan 2017)
Serotonin signaling contribution to an evolutionary success: the jaw joint of vertebrates
Abstract
Serotonin (5-HT) is an ancient molecule that appeared very early during evolution, and it is present in different phyla. The 5-HT signaling system includes several G-coupled receptors and it is widely conserved in vertebrates. 5-HT is implicated in an astonishing number of biological processes and it has a key role as a morphogen in several complex networks during development before it can act as a neurotransmitter. Recent advances on how serotonin signaling can influence early development and its role in vertebrate morphogenesis come from mice and Xenopus. The emergence of jawed vertebrates (gnathostomes) from jawless vertebrates (agnathans) represents a major event in the evolution of vertebrates. The acquisition of a jaw is assumed to have occurred after the split between gnathostomes and jawless vertebrates. A crucial question concerns what changes were introduced in the developmental patterning programme to obtain a jaw joint that is one of the most innovative inventions in the history of vertebrates. Molecular and developmental studies performed in Xenopus revealed for the first time that serotonin, through the 5-HT2B receptor signaling, is both sufficient and necessary to modulate the shape and functionality of the jaw, including the jaw joint. Accordingly, serotonin can be added to the complex interactive network of extrinsic factors that regulates mandibular arch development, thus contributing to one of the major vertebrate successes in evolution.
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