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1 ebrates) and Ambulacraria (hemichordates and echinoderms).
2 the entire evolutionary history of crinoids (echinoderms).
3 ne transgenic sea urchin and, indeed, of any echinoderm.
4 ng behaviour and pentaradial body plan of an echinoderm.
5 on embryonic development described in larval echinoderms.
6  in a mineralized structure is shared by all echinoderms.
7 mic information from sea urchins and related echinoderms.
8 tion in anthozoan cnidarians, ascidians, and echinoderms.
9 ast to hemichordates and indirect-developing echinoderms.
10 ecific at least to sea urchins if not to all echinoderms.
11 ould be traced back before the divergence of echinoderms.
12  a deuterostome related to hemichordates and echinoderms.
13 uding plants, fungi, nematodes, insects, and echinoderms.
14 ental style of sea urchins not seen in other echinoderms.
15 lopmental features of very distantly related echinoderms.
16 hly conserved regulator of skeletogenesis in echinoderms.
17               Dispersal did not increase for echinoderms.
18  web resource supporting genomic research on echinoderms.
19  factor that facilitates ACD diversity among echinoderms.
20 for the amazing regenerative capabilities of echinoderms.
21 (ASTC) but with both types being retained in echinoderms.
22 e are evolutionarily conserved also in basal echinoderms.
23 e forms micromeres unique to echinoids among echinoderms.
24 entacular systems of extant pterobranchs and echinoderms.
25  evolution of the derived adult body plan of echinoderms.
26  a conserved program of skeletogenesis among echinoderms.
27 f these subfamilies are conserved throughout echinoderms.
28 es also occur in a deuterostomian phylum-the echinoderms.
29  sNPF/PrRP-type receptors were identified in echinoderms.
30  using a global sample of Palaeozoic crinoid echinoderms.
31 ellular second messenger in both mammals and echinoderms.
32 ilateral to pentaradial body plans unique to echinoderms.
33 europeptides that act as muscle relaxants in echinoderms.
34 to it was not known if this applies to other echinoderms.
35 n mechanisms of mutable connective tissue in echinoderms.
36 ide and endocrine-type signalling systems in echinoderms.
37 s, as it is distinguishable in chordates and echinoderms.
38 th immunohistochemistry and studies of other echinoderms [10, 11].
39 gth, showing a high level of homology to the Echinoderm 77-kDa microtubule-associated protein (EMAP).
40  operating in embryos of a distantly related echinoderm, a starfish.
41               The discovery of ependymins in echinoderms, a group well known for their regenerative c
42 ut 670 million years ago, and chordates from echinoderms about 600 million years ago.
43                     This taxon confirms that echinoderms acquired plating before pentaradial symmetry
44                                          The echinoderm adhesome (complement of adhesion-related gene
45                               Further, other echinoderms' AGS or chimeric AGS that contain the C-term
46 le and supported by the development of a new echinoderm anatomical ontology, uniformly applied formal
47  tail flagellar tubulins and tektins from an echinoderm and a mollusc were studied systematically usi
48    The release of Ca(2+) at fertilization in echinoderm and ascidian eggs requires SH2 domain-mediate
49 of the KRAB motif prior to the divergence of echinoderm and chordate lineages.
50  has been examined experimentally in several echinoderm and hemichordate classes.
51 nalysis indicates that Y. biscarpa is a stem-echinoderm and not only is this species the oldest and m
52 ) This is the oldest bilaterally symmetrical echinoderm and the first with this body plan known from
53 ts associated ACD factors are present in all echinoderms and across most metazoans.
54 hemichordates, with larval phases similar to echinoderms and an adult body plan with an anteroposteri
55 gulator of skeletogenic specification across echinoderms and an example of a "terminal selector" gene
56 hile preserving the core ACD machinery among echinoderms and beyond during evolution.
57 ution is similar to other invertebrate taxa (echinoderms and bivalve molluscs) but not to vertebrates
58 , and mollusks) diverged from deuterostomes (echinoderms and chordates) about 670 million years ago,
59 , and arthropods) and "deuterostomes" (e.g., echinoderms and chordates) display fertilization-induced
60 arine invertebrates that share features with echinoderms and chordates.
61 leading from this ancestor to hemichordates, echinoderms and chordates.
62 scriptomes for 14 hemichordates as well as 8 echinoderms and complemented these with existing data fo
63 urula-type larva typical of other classes of echinoderms and considered to represent the ancestral ec
64 s a conserved regulator of skeletogenesis in echinoderms and evolutionary changes in Alx1 sequence an
65                                       First, echinoderms and hemichordates have similar feeding larva
66 stomes, the group composed of the chordates, echinoderms and hemichordates(1), is still controversial
67 ave been linked to the complex Ambulacraria (echinoderms and hemichordates) in a clade called the Xen
68 l and molecular data place the Ambulacraria (echinoderms and hemichordates) within the Deuterostomia
69 ngle crystal of calcite is characteristic of echinoderms and is always associated with radial symmetr
70  organisms as diverse as insects, nematodes, echinoderms and mammals.
71        Primary food resources for lithodids--echinoderms and mollusks--were abundant on the upper slo
72 could have been the most effective for these echinoderms and that increasing stem length might have s
73 antly different developmental roles in these echinoderms and that the targets and the binding motifs
74                                              Echinoderms and the polychaete Eunice norvegica occupy t
75          Micromeres are not present in other echinoderms and thus are considered as a derived feature
76                    Among deuterostomes, only echinoderms and vertebrates produce extensive biomineral
77 r events in skeletogenesis appear similar in echinoderms and vertebrates, leaving open the possibilit
78 roteins that mediate biomineral formation in echinoderms and vertebrates, possibly reflecting loose c
79 omain in the common deuterostome ancestor of echinoderms and vertebrates.
80 y relationships between biomineralization in echinoderms and vertebrates.
81 hree other invertebrate taxa: hemichordates, echinoderms and Xenoturbella.
82 tterns in the embryos of fishes, amphibians, echinoderms, and ascidians, as well as the genetic and p
83 e a deuterostome phylum, the sister group to echinoderms, and closely related to chordates.
84 ession module in amphioxus, like the aGRN in echinoderms, and that its overactivation suppresses fore
85 aracteristics of fibrils from two classes of echinoderms, and to determine whether a single growth mo
86 dodermal cell layer of the gut in chordates, echinoderms, annelids and molluscs.
87                                              Echinoderms are among the most morphologically distincti
88                                              Echinoderms are among the most primitive deuterostomes a
89        Among the earliest deuterostomes, the echinoderms are an evolutionary important group of ancie
90                                      Because echinoderms are closely related to chordates and postdat
91                                              Echinoderms are considered particularly sensitive to oce
92                                      Because echinoderms are defined by morphological novelty, even t
93                                              Echinoderms are extremely scarce, while sponges and alga
94                        Sea urchins and other echinoderms are important experimental models for studyi
95 r, the technologies for obtaining transgenic echinoderms are limited and tracking cells involved in r
96 from the perspective of ectoderm patterning, echinoderms are mostly head-like animals and provides a
97 ow that Alx1 proteins from distantly related echinoderms are not interchangeable, although the sequen
98                                              Echinoderms are positioned at the base of Deuterostomia
99 ation in marine organisms such as corals and echinoderms, as shown in many laboratory-based experimen
100                                           In echinoderm, ascidian, and vertebrate eggs, the Ca(2+) ri
101 tal stressors or water currents that enables echinoderm Asteroidea (sea stars) and Holothuroidea (sea
102 e, we describe a new bilaterally symmetrical echinoderm, Atlascystis acantha, from the Cambrian of Mo
103 evolutionary process by which the pentameral echinoderm body plan emerged from a bilateral ancestor.
104 racterize the radiation and establishment of echinoderm body plans during the early Paleozoic.
105      The presence of four markedly different echinoderm body plans in these earliest faunas indicates
106 he homologous signaling pathway described in echinoderms, both upstream and downstream of sAC, are ex
107 ly is this species the oldest and most basal echinoderm, but it also predates all known hemichordates
108 n to active mobile detritus feeding in early echinoderms (c.a. 500 Mya) required sophisticated locomo
109        Through comparisons with two Cambrian echinoderms, Cambraster and Stromatocystites, we show th
110 comparisons of chordates, hemichordates, and echinoderms can inform hypotheses for the evolution of t
111 ogy relationships within tunicates, and with echinoderms, cephalochordates and vertebrates.
112    While sea urchin muscle actins support an echinoderm-chordate sister relationship, sea star sequen
113 source descriptions for other members of the echinoderm clade which in total span 540 million years o
114 s specific to Ambulacraria (the hemichordate-echinoderm clade), two forming an inverted terminal pair
115 nown about these mechanisms in several other echinoderm classes, including the Ophiuroidea.
116                                  Of the five echinoderm classes, only the modern sea urchins (euechin
117 both cases, the appearance of well-preserved echinoderms coincides with a change in palaeogeographic
118 etric similarity, characteristic features of echinoderm collagen fibrils.
119 of bilaterians composed by hemichordates and echinoderms (collectively called Ambulacraria) and chord
120  processes of Early Ordovician trilobite and echinoderm communities from the Central Anti-Atlas (Moro
121                                              Echinoderms comprise a group of animals with impressive
122  the user interface to adapt to multispecies echinoderm content.
123 ite their key phylogenetic position as basal echinoderms, crinoids have been scarcely studied in deve
124 gastropod mollusc Marseniopsis mollis and an echinoderm Cucumaria georgiana.
125 w material for the study of the evolution of echinoderm development.
126                                              Echinoderms display a vast array of pigmentation and pat
127      The mutable collagenous tissue (MCT) of echinoderms (e.g., sea cucumbers and starfish) is a rema
128 ound in the mineralized skeletal elements of echinoderms (e.g., sea urchin spines), achieves simultan
129 tery, while fibronectin labeling and 4G7 (an echinoderm ECM component) are continuously present.
130                                         Upon echinoderm egg fertilization, cortical secretory vesicle
131 l transduction leading to calcium release in echinoderm eggs at fertilization requires phospholipase
132     Because Ca2+ release at fertilization in echinoderm eggs is initiated by SH2 domain-mediated acti
133 aka with that in other eggs, particularly in echinoderm eggs, suggests that such a propagated calcium
134  These results indicate that, in contrast to echinoderm eggs, the ER of mouse eggs does not become di
135 tion in initiating this signaling pathway in echinoderm eggs.
136                         The hyaline layer of echinoderm embryos is an extraembryonic matrix that func
137 nsible for the stimulation of cytokinesis in Echinoderm embryos, it has been suggested that a signal
138 de (NiCl(2)), a potent ventralizing agent on echinoderm embryos, on the indirect developing enteropne
139      While supported by compelling data from Echinoderm embryos, recent observations suggest that the
140 escribe the behavior and function of Ect2 in echinoderm embryos, showing that Ect2 migrates from spin
141 le signals contribute to furrow induction in echinoderm embryos, they likely converge on the same sig
142                               Embryos of the echinoderms, especially those of sea urchins and sea sta
143 igations that will reveal new information on echinoderm evo-devo neurobiology.
144 GRN has been modified (and conserved) during echinoderm evolution, and point to mechanisms associated
145 ence took place during the initial stages of echinoderm evolution.
146                         Furthermore, because echinoderms exhibit diverse programs of skeletal develop
147                      Among higher metazoans, echinoderms exhibit the most impressive capacity for reg
148             The former represents the oldest echinoderm fauna from Gondwana, approximately equivalent
149      Here we report the discovery of two new echinoderm faunas from the early part of the Cambrian of
150 the hemichordate phylum, which together with echinoderms form a sister group of the chordates.
151                                              Echinoderms form the focus of extraocular vision researc
152  interpreted in light of the well-understood echinoderm fossil record.
153                                              Echinoderm fossils that have retained their bulk origina
154   The origin of the pentaradial body plan of echinoderms from a bilateral ancestor is one of the most
155                                              Echinoderms from the Cambrian and from the Carboniferous
156 seawater Mg/Ca of approximately 3.3, whereas echinoderms from the Jurassic to the Cretaceous indicate
157 fferent dispersal abilities: coastal fishes, echinoderms, gastropod molluscs, brachyuran decapod crus
158 n Strongylocentrotus purpuratus is the first echinoderm genome to be sequenced.
159 he public database of information related to echinoderm genomics.
160 owever, do not support a cephalochordate and echinoderm grouping and we conclude that chordates are m
161                        Neural development of echinoderms has always been difficult to interpret, as l
162                     Photosensitivity in most echinoderms has been attributed to 'diffuse' dermal rece
163 r the last decades in echinoid (sea urchins) echinoderms has led to the characterization of gene regu
164                                    All adult echinoderms have a calcite-based endoskeleton, a synapom
165                                 As a result, echinoderms have contributed significantly to our unders
166                                              Echinoderms have either radial or bilateral symmetry, he
167 ch linked to a death domain, suggesting that echinoderms have evolved unique apoptotic signaling path
168                                     However, echinoderms have two SS/ASTC-type neuropeptides (SS1 and
169                          The earliest fossil echinoderms have, until now, come almost exclusively fro
170                    Sea cucumbers, like other echinoderms, have the ability to rapidly and reversibly
171 cation have been highly conserved within the echinoderm + hemichordate clade, nothing is known about
172 an deviations from it (ascidian, vertebrate, echinoderm/hemichordate).
173 rso-ventral patterning may be shared between echinoderms, hemichordates and a putative ambulacrarian
174  as an array of disparate forms that include echinoderms, hemichordates and more problematic groups s
175 acking in more early-diverged deuterostomes (echinoderms, hemichordates), it is uncertain whether the
176                                          The echinoderm Hox gene cluster is essentially similar to th
177                                              Echinoderm Hox genes of Paralog Groups (PG) 1 and 2 are
178 lthough larval cloning is well documented in echinoderms, identified stimuli for cloning are limited
179 colonial tube-dwelling pterobranchs) and the echinoderms (including starfish).
180                                              Echinoderms, including sea stars, have extensive ability
181 cal similarities with both enteropneusts and echinoderms, indicating that the enteropneust body plan
182 /or biomass of scavenging species (epifaunal echinoderms, infaunal crustaceans) by two to four-fold i
183  The major microtubule-associated protein in echinoderms is a 77-kDa, WD repeat protein, called EMAP.
184                              Tbrain in these echinoderms is thus a perfect example of an orthologous
185                                 Evolution of echinoderm larvae has taken place over widely varying ti
186 cean acidification acts on pH homeostasis in echinoderm larvae.
187 ar and intracellular pH (pH(e) and pH(i)) in echinoderm larvae.
188 ms and considered to represent the ancestral echinoderm larval form.
189 living echinoderms to outline the origins of echinoderm larval forms, their diversity among living ec
190 n (Fortunian) of China with a characteristic echinoderm-like plated theca, a muscular stalk reminisce
191 n retained since the Cambrian Period in both echinoderm lineages.
192 hether the highly derived adult body plan of echinoderms masks underlying patterning similarities wit
193                                              Echinoderm mass mortality events shape marine ecosystems
194  the retention of both neuropeptide types in echinoderms may be a consequence of the evolution of a m
195 two groups, ancestors of the vertebrates and echinoderms may have utilized similar components of a sh
196             In this report, we show that the echinoderm microtubule (MT)-associated protein (EMAP) an
197 lled inducible cell models expressing either Echinoderm Microtubule Associated Protein Like 4 (EML4)-
198                              Proteins of the echinoderm microtubule-associated protein (EMAP)-like (E
199                       The human homologue of Echinoderm microtubule-associated protein defines a nove
200                                              Echinoderm microtubule-associated protein like 1 (EML1)
201 overed example is a fusion between the genes echinoderm microtubule-associated protein like 4 (EML4)
202 ogenic fusion proteins nucleophosmin-ALK and echinoderm microtubule-associated protein like 4-ALK, wh
203                                              Echinoderm microtubule-associated protein-like (EML) is
204 en Y- and DeltaY-microtubules and found that echinoderm microtubule-associated protein-like 2 (EML2)
205 ized double stranded breaks (DSB) within the echinoderm microtubule-associated protein-like 4 (EML4)
206                        We show here that the echinoderm microtubule-associated protein-like 4 (EML4)-
207                                          The echinoderm microtubule-associated protein-like 4 (EML4)-
208                                              Echinoderm microtubule-associated protein-like 4 (EML4)-
209                          In the treatment of echinoderm microtubule-associated protein-like 4 (EML4)-
210            Of the 67 primary NSCLCs, 17 were echinoderm microtubule-associated protein-like 4-ALK tra
211 ing bromodomain-containing protein 4 and the echinoderm microtubule-associated protein-like 4-anaplas
212                                          The echinoderm microtubule-associated protein-like 4-anaplas
213 ion], CUTO32 (KIF5B-RET fusion), and CUTO42 (echinoderm microtubule-associated protein-like 4-RET fus
214 m larval forms, their diversity among living echinoderms, molecular clocks and rates of larval evolut
215 chaeridians have been allied with barnacles, echinoderms, molluscs or annelids.
216 have been observed spectromicroscopically in echinoderms, mollusks, and cnidarians, phyla drawn from
217 elationship, sea star sequences suggest that echinoderm muscle actins are convergent with chordate mu
218 wever, is substantially older, detectable in echinoderms, nematodes, and cnidarians.
219     Here we report the expression domains in echinoderms of three important developmental regulatory
220    Furthermore, the phylogenetic position of echinoderms offers the opportunity to compare the comple
221 n other organisms, more than half have clear echinoderm orthologs.
222 lt skeletogenesis in the sea star, a distant echinoderm outgroup, that the regulatory apparatus respo
223 it variously as related to hemichordates and echinoderms owing to similarities of nerve net and epide
224  and sterols profiles of the widely consumed echinoderms Paracentrotus lividus Lamarck (sea urchin),
225                                  Research in echinoderms, particularly sea star and sea urchin embryo
226 current dataset is the largest assembled for echinoderm phylogeny and transcriptomics.
227                                          The echinoderm phylum consists of several model species that
228                 New genomes from the diverse echinoderm phylum will be added and supported as data be
229 fically coopted for biomineralization in the echinoderm phylum.
230  that controls skeletogenesis throughout the echinoderm phylum.
231 ost enigmatic mobile groups of early stalked echinoderms-pleurocystitids.
232  to argue that the latest common ancestor of echinoderms plus hemichordates used a maximal indirect m
233                                              Echinoderms possess one of the most highly derived body
234 ural bulbs) provides the first comprehensive echinoderm protein database for neural tissue, including
235  both SS-type and ASTC-type neuropeptides in echinoderms provides a unique context to compare their p
236 d dollars, heart urchins, and other nonmodel echinoderms provides an ideal dataset with which to expl
237 ed in plankton, sediments and in nonasteroid echinoderms, providing a possible mechanism for viral sp
238 ence that the enteric nervous system of this echinoderm regenerates after evisceration and that in 3-
239 which calcite crystals become co-oriented in echinoderms remains enigmatic.
240                                              Echinoderms represent a broad phylum with many tractable
241                                              Echinoderms represent a researchable subset of a dynamic
242      However, since they are the only extant echinoderms retaining the ancestral body plan of the gro
243 tle star genome is the most rearranged among echinoderms sequenced so far, featuring a reorganized Ho
244 of a global sample of post-Paleozoic crinoid echinoderms shows that this group underwent a rapid dive
245 gene regulatory network (GRN) that underlies echinoderm skeletogenesis is a prominent model of GRN ar
246 tify kirrelL as a component of the ancestral echinoderm skeletogenic GRN.
247         As the high-magnesium calcite of the echinoderm skeleton is a biomineral form highly sensitiv
248 ays an integral role in the formation of the echinoderm skeleton.
249 olved with stereom formation in the earliest echinoderms some 520 million years ago.
250 relL cis-regulatory regions from seven other echinoderm species that together represent all classes w
251            Echinobase currently supports six echinoderm species, focused on those used for genomics,
252 netic RhoA activity zones are common to four echinoderm species, the vertebrate Xenopus laevis, and t
253 are entirely consistent with data from other echinoderm species.
254 DED and CARD adaptor domains) have undergone echinoderm-specific expansions.
255 s is an ancient pleisiomorphic aspect of the echinoderm-specific regulatory heritage.
256 sed RNA-Seq to profile adult tissues from 42 echinoderm specimens from 24 orders and 37 families.
257  in the most compact forms - for example, in echinoderm sperm and avian erythrocytes - could adopt a
258 ype signalling systems in a deuterostome-the echinoderm (starfish) Asterias rubens.
259                             In contrast, the echinoderm Strongylocentrotus purpuratus contains a 588
260 nd target genes present in the genome of the echinoderm Strongylocentrotus purpuratus.
261                                          The echinoderms, Strongylocentrotus purpuratus (sea urchin)
262 initial morphological diversification in the echinoderm subphylum Blastozoa was so pronounced that mo
263 ciated protein, EMAP, was identified only in echinoderms such as sea urchin, starfish and sand dollar
264 tes, hemichordates (such as acorn worms) and echinoderms (such as starfish) comprise the group Deuter
265  than congeneric species in other classes of echinoderms, suggesting that low extinction rates may be
266 semblies with similar ones from mollusks and echinoderms suggests plausible pH-dependent quaternary t
267 hen a sea urchin is used as a representative echinoderm than when a sea star is used.
268 ggestion that cephalochordates are closer to echinoderms than to vertebrates and urochordates, meanin
269 a repository of orthologous transcripts from echinoderms that is searchable via keywords and sequence
270  In hemichordates and many direct-developing echinoderms, the adult is built onto the larva, with the
271                           Thus, as for other echinoderms, the phylum- and order-specific aspects of t
272 cer activity during embryogenesis of a model echinoderm: the sea urchin, Strongylocentrotus purpuratu
273 ry expression in the indirect development of echinoderms, their sister group, they reveal the evoluti
274 e apparent absence of V(D)J recombination in echinoderms, this finding strongly suggests that linked
275 ) show that the gene is expressed in several echinoderm tissues, including esophagus, mesenteries, go
276 findings emphasize the crucial importance of echinoderms to detect long-range expression conservation
277 n of AGS protein is key in the transition of echinoderms to micromere formation and the current devel
278 lution of the diverse larval forms of living echinoderms to outline the origins of echinoderm larval
279 atomy and life habits of Cambrian-Ordovician echinoderms to test which facet better facilitates futur
280 karyotes from unicellular organisms, through echinoderms to vertebrates, use the actomyosin network d
281 y Cambrian forms are still characteristic of echinoderms today.
282  rise to the pentaradial structure of extant echinoderms, transforming our understanding of the origi
283                     One of our goals for the echinoderm tree of life project is to identify orthologs
284 horan lobopodia, ascidian ampullae, and even echinoderm tube feet.
285             In contrast, indirect-developing echinoderms undergo radical metamorphosis where adult ax
286                       Sperm from mammals and echinoderms utilize a highly conserved signaling mechani
287 ircuit is part of an ancestral GRN governing echinoderm vegetal pole mesoderm development.
288 erning system that was present in the common echinoderm/vertebrate ancestor.
289 commodating extensions of the characteristic echinoderm water vascular system-providing a clear point
290 l validations by transgenesis experiments in echinoderms, we propose that gastrulation is the stage o
291 s that have thus far only been identified in echinoderms were identified, including L- and F-type SAL
292                 We show that these Paleozoic echinoderms were likely able to move over the sea bottom
293 n (OM) is initiated in lower vertebrates and echinoderms when maturation-inducing substances (MIS) bi
294 to have evolved very early in the history of echinoderms, whereas others probably evolved during the
295 ailable regarding the N-glycomic capacity of echinoderms, which are otherwise known to produce a dive
296 and genomics of chordates, hemichordates and echinoderms, which together make up the deuterostome cla
297 athway is essential for biomineralization in echinoderms, while in many other phyla, across metazoans
298    Brittle stars are a species-rich class of echinoderms with outstanding regenerative abilities, but
299  a representative of the sister group to the echinoderms within the deuterostomes.
300 fication, we studied myosin II activation in echinoderm zygotes by assessing serine19-phosphorylated

 
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