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The development of paired appendages was a key innovation during evolution and facilitated the aquatic to terrestrial transition of vertebrates. Largely derived from the lateral plate mesoderm (LPM), one hypothesis for the evolution of paired fins invokes derivation from unpaired median fins via a pair of lateral fin folds located between pectoral and pelvic fin territories. Whilst unpaired and paired fins exhibit similar structural and molecular characteristics, no definitive evidence exists for paired lateral fin folds in larvae or adults of any extant or extinct species. As unpaired fin core components are regarded as exclusively derived from paraxial mesoderm, any transition presumes both co-option of a fin developmental programme to the LPM and bilateral duplication. Here, we identify that the larval zebrafish unpaired pre-anal fin fold (PAFF) is derived from the LPM and thus may represent a developmental intermediate between median and paired fins. We trace the contribution of LPM to the PAFF in both cyclostomes and gnathostomes, supporting the notion that this is an ancient trait of vertebrates. Finally, we observe that the PAFF can be bifurcated by increasing bone morphogenetic protein signalling, generating LPM-derived paired fin folds. Our work provides evidence that lateral fin folds may have existed as embryonic anlage for elaboration to paired fins.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-06100-w | DOI Listing |
Brain Behav Evol
August 2025
Cervical and lumbar enlargements involving several spinal segments are present in the spinal cord of tetrapods, reflecting the heavy motor and sensory innervation of limbs. Such spinal enlargements are not apparent in teleost fishes. However, teleosts possess paired pectoral and pelvic fins that are homologous to forelimbs and hindlimbs, respectively, and modest spinal enlargements might be present in teleosts as well.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
August 2025
Polish Geological Institute-National Research Institute, 4 Rakowiecka Street, Warsaw, PL-00-975, Poland.
A new trackway produced by crawling fishes, which includes imprints of the trunk, snout, tail, body drag traces, and pectoral fins, was discovered in the Lower Devonian (middle-upper Emsian) marginal marine deposits in the Holy Cross Mountains, Poland. The snout imprints are represented by a low-angle variant of the already described Osculichnus tarnowskae, which has generally been interpreted as a hunting trace of fishes. However, in this case, it is considered an imprint of a fish's snout, used for anchoring in the sediment during the locomotion of at least partially emerged fish.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Adv
July 2025
Divisions of Polar and Earth Sciences, Korea Polar Research Institute, Incheon 21990, Republic of Korea.
Nectocaridids are enigmatic Palaeozoic animals with a controversial phylogenetic position. Previous hypotheses have placed them in their own phylum, chordates, molluscs (specifically cephalopods), or radiodont panarthropods. We describe here a nectocaridid, gen.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
July 2025
Instituto de Biotecnología y Biomedicina de Cantabria CSIC-SODERCAN-Universidad de Cantabria (Spain).
Limb function requires polarized anatomy across the dorsal-ventral (DV) axis, but it is unclear when the capacity for DV differentiation of paired appendages arose in evolution. Here we define ancestral DV patterning programs in the fins of fishes. We show that the orthologue of the limb dorsal determinant, Lmx1b, is required to establish dorsality in zebrafish pectoral fins and is regulated by a conserved cis-regulatory hub.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBioinspir Biomim
July 2025
Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22903, United States of America.
Fish across many species share similar schooling behavior in which abundance flow interactions occur with hydrodynamic advantages from the vortex flow shed by the conspecifics. This study investigates the mechanisms of schooling interactions in thunniform swimmers, focusing on body effects, using high-fidelity three-dimensional direct numerical simulations of a pair of closely swimming tuna-like models with realistic body morphology and swimming kinematics. An in-house immerse-boundary-method-based incompressible Navier-Stokes flow solver is employed to resolve near-body vortex topology, and the results are analyzed in detail.
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