6 results found
    1. Evolutionary Biology

    Extant cartilaginous fishes share trabecular and areolar mineralization patterns, but not tesserae, and evidence for a paedomorphic chimaera skeleton

    Oghenevwogaga J. Atake, Fidji Berio ... B. Frank Eames
    Not revised
    Reviewed Preprint v1
    • Valuable
    • Convincing
    1. Ecology

    Climate-driven deoxygenation elevates fishing vulnerability for the ocean's widest ranging shark

    Marisa Vedor, Nuno Queiroz ... David W Sims
    Habitats of satellite-tracked blue sharks were shifted surfaceward by an oxygen minimum zone (OMZ) at depth thereby increasing their susceptibility to capture by longline fishing focused above the OMZ.
    1. Developmental Biology
    2. Stem Cells and Regenerative Medicine

    Adult chondrogenesis and spontaneous cartilage repair in the skate, Leucoraja erinacea

    Aleksandra Marconi, Amy Hancock-Ronemus, J Andrew Gillis
    The ability of cartilaginous fishes to generate new cartilage through adulthood, and to spontaneously repair damaged cartilage, could shed light on novel cell-based therapies for cartilage injury in mammals.
    1. Developmental Biology
    2. Evolutionary Biology

    Tooth Development: What sharks and mammals share

    Sophie Pantalacci
    The tooth shape of sharks and mice are regulated by a similar signaling center despite their teeth having very different geometries.
    Version of Record
    Insight
    1. Developmental Biology
    2. Evolutionary Biology

    An epithelial signalling centre in sharks supports homology of tooth morphogenesis in vertebrates

    Alexandre P Thiery, Ariane SI Standing ... Gareth J Fraser
    The development of diverse tooth shapes among vertebrates, from sharks to mammals, is a highly conserved process, utilising a similar dental signalling centre for more than 400 million years.
    1. Developmental Biology
    2. Evolutionary Biology

    A shift in anterior–posterior positional information underlies the fin-to-limb evolution

    Koh Onimaru, Shigehiro Kuraku ... Mikiko Tanaka
    A shift in antero-posterior positional information may contribute to the fin-to-limb transformation.

Refine your results by:

Type
Research categories