Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hill, Kaleb, Griffing, Aaron H, Palmer, Michael A, Lemma, Bezia, Lupo, Aria S, Gamble, Tony, Shylo, Natalia A, Košmrlj, Andrej, Trainor, Paul A, Nelson, Celeste M
Format: Artículo científico
Language:en
Published: Developmental dynamics : an official publication of the American Association of Anatomists 2025
Online Access:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41235677/
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Table of Contents:
  • Biophysical processes of morphogenesis in lizard lungs. Hill, Kaleb Griffing, Aaron H Palmer, Michael A Lemma, Bezia Lupo, Aria S Gamble, Tony Shylo, Natalia A Košmrlj, Andrej Trainor, Paul A Nelson, Celeste M The lungs of squamate reptiles (lizards and snakes) are highly diverse, exhibiting single chambers, multiple chambers, transitional forms with two to three chambers, along with a suite of other anatomical features, including finger-like epithelial projections into the body cavity known as diverticulae. During embryonic development of the simple, sac-like lungs of anoles, the epithelium is pushed through the openings of a pulmonary smooth muscle mesh by the forces of luminal fluid pressure. This process of stress ball morphogenesis generates the faveolar epithelium typical of squamate lungs. Here, we compared embryonic lung development in brown anoles, leopard geckos, and veiled chameleons to determine if stress ball morphogenesis is conserved across squamates and to understand the physical processes that generate transitional-chambered lungs with diverticulae. We found that epithelial protrusion through the holes in a pulmonary smooth muscle mesh is conserved across squamates. Surprisingly, however, we found that luminal inflation is not conserved. Instead, experimental and computational evidence suggests that leopard geckos and veiled chameleons may generate their faveolae via epithelial folding downstream of epithelial proliferation. Our data also suggest that the transitional chambers and diverticulae of veiled chameleon lungs may develop via apical constriction, a process known to be crucial for airway branching in the bird lung. Distinct morphogenetic mechanisms generate epithelial diversity in squamate lungs, which may underpin their species-specific physiological and ecological adaptations.