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An Embryonic Staging Table for In Ovo Development of Eublepharis macularius, the Leopard Gecko

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TLDR
An embryonic staging table of in ovo development for the basal gekkotan Eublepharis macularius (the leopard gecko) is presented and this species holds great promise as a model for developmental studies focusing on pentadactyly and the formation of digits.
Abstract
Squamates constitute a major vertebrate radiation, representing almost one-third of all known amniotes. Although speciose and morphologically diverse, they remain poorly represented in developmental studies. Here, we present an embryonic staging table of in ovo development for the basal gekkotan Eublepharis macularius (the leopard gecko) and advocate this species as a laboratory-appropriate developmental model. E. macularius, is a hardy and tractable species of relatively large body size (with concomitantly relatively large eggs and embryos), that is widely available and easy to maintain and propagate. Additionally, E. macularius displays a body plan appropriate to the study of the plesiomorphic quadrupedal condition of early pentadactylous terrestrial amniotes. Although not unexpected, it is worth noting that the morphological events characterizing limb development in E. macularius are comparable with those described for the avian Gallus gallus. Therefore, E. macularius holds great promise as a model for developmental studies focusing on pentadactyly and the formation of digits. Furthermore, it is also attractive as a developmental model because it demonstrates temperature-dependent sex determination. The staging table presented herein is based on an all-female series and represents the entire 52 day in ovo period. Overall, embryogenesis of E. macularius is similar to that of other squamates in terms of developmental stage attained at the time of oviposition, patterns of limb and pharyngeal arch development, and features of the appearance of scalation and pigmentation, indicative of a conserved developmental program.

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A novel amniote model of epimorphic regeneration: the leopard gecko, Eublepharis macularius.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that tail regeneration in lizards involves a highly conserved sequence of events permitting the establishment of a staging table, and that regeneration is blastema-mediated.
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Identification of putative dental epithelial stem cells in a lizard with life-long tooth replacement

TL;DR: It is suggested that the LRCs in the lingual dental lamina represent a population of stem cells, the immediate descendents of which form the successional lamina and, ultimately, the replacement teeth in the gecko.
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The anatomical placode in reptile scale morphogenesis indicates shared ancestry among skin appendages in amniotes.

TL;DR: A new evolutionary scenario where hairs, feathers, and scales of extant species are homologous structures inherited, with modification, from their shared reptilian ancestor’s skin appendages already characterized by an anatomical placode and associated signaling molecules is revealed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Autocrine and paracrine Shh signaling are necessary for tooth morphogenesis, but not tooth replacement in snakes and lizards (Squamata).

TL;DR: In this study, it is definitively refuted a role for Shh signaling in successional dental lamina formation and concluded that other pathways regulate tooth replacement in squamates.
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Expression of regulatory genes in the embryonic brain of a lizard and implications for understanding pallial organization and evolution.

TL;DR: Cloned and analyzed the expression of the genes Emx1, Lhx2, Lx9, and Tbr1 in the embryonic telencephalon of the lacertid lizard Psammodromus algirus to identify a distinct ventrocaudal pallial sector comparable to the avian arcopallium and to part of the mammalian pallial amygdala.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A series of normal stages in the development of the chick embryo

TL;DR: The preparation of a series of normal stages of the chick embryo does not need justification at a time when chick ernbryos are not only widely used in descriptive and experimental embryology but are proving to be increasingly valuable in medical research, as in work on viruses and cancer.
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A series of normal stages in the development of the chick embryo

TL;DR: In this article, a series of normal stages of the chick embryo is described in terms of the length of time of incubation, except for the first three days during which more detailed characteristics such as the number of somites are applied.
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Molecular Phylogenetics of Squamata: The Position of Snakes, Amphisbaenians, and Dibamids, and the Root of the Squamate Tree

TL;DR: A molecular phylogenetic study of 69 squamate species suggests that similar states in Sphenodon and Iguania result from homoplasy, and species previously placed in Scleroglossa, Varanoidea, and several other higher taxa do not form monophyletic groups.
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Phylogeny And Systematics Of Squamata (Reptilia) Based On Morphology

TL;DR: This study examines squamate relationships using 222 ingroup taxa scored for 363 morphological characters and confirms the monophyly of the clades Scleroglossa (extant squamates exclusive of Iguania), Gekkota, Scincomorpha, Lacertoidea,ScincoideA, Anguimorpha and Varanoidea.
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