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1 fish), and Neoceratodus forsteri (Australian lungfish).
2 ving relatives of tetrapods: coelacanths and lungfish.
3 nct from proenkephalin, must be expressed in lungfish.
4 to ray-finned fish than to either lamprey or lungfish.
5 , contribute to the tetrapod-like biology of lungfishes.
6 sence of O-MALT in the mucosa of the African lungfish, an extant representative of the closest ancest
7 n the brain of two representative species of lungfishes, an African lungfish (Protopterus dolloi) and
8  the absence of a Leu-enkephalin sequence in lungfish and amphibian proenkephalin would suggest that
9 he mitochondrial genome are conserved in the lungfish and are more similar to those of land vertebrat
10 on analysis reveal notable parallels between lungfish and salamander appendage regeneration, includin
11  shared derived characters in the coelacanth/lungfish and tetrapod lineages.
12 likelihood) point toward the hypothesis that lungfishes and coelacanths form a monophyletic group and
13 ese patterns are principally driven by early lungfishes and coelacanths, which display high rates of
14 geometry before fusing into a single unit in lungfishes and early tetrapods(1).
15 ies with extant lobe-finned sarcopterygians (lungfishes and tetrapods) in lung structure.
16 her groups of extant lobe-finned fishes, the lungfishes and the tetrapods.
17 canth), Lepidosiren paradoxa (South American lungfish), and Neoceratodus forsteri (Australian lungfis
18  is also found in all ray-finned fishes, the lungfish, and most tetrapods.
19  phylogenomic analysis, we conclude that the lungfish, and not the coelacanth, is the closest living
20            As the sister group to tetrapods, lungfish are a morphologically and phylogenetically rele
21                                              Lungfishes are a group of sarcopterygian fishes currentl
22                                              Lungfishes are the closest living relatives of land vert
23                              Salamanders and lungfishes are the only sarcopterygians (lobe-finned ver
24 f lobe-finned fishes, the coelacanth and the lungfishes, are still unresolved and debated.
25                 The evolutionary position of lungfish as possibly the closest living relative among f
26                                              Lungfishes belong to lobe-fined fish (Sarcopterygii) tha
27 rm the intermediate phylogenetic position of lungfish between ray-finned fishes and tetrapods.
28  differ markedly from those of tetrapods and lungfish, but during the course of teleost evolution the
29                        The genomes of living lungfishes can inform on the molecular-developmental bas
30                               The Australian lungfish cDNA is 1284 nucleotides in length and the open
31 ance facilitates chromosomal rearrangements, lungfish chromosomes still conservatively reflect the ur
32 ight and electron microscopy reveal that the lungfish cocoon is a living tissue that traps bacteria.
33                  Maximum parsimony favored a lungfish/coelacanth or a lungfish/tetrapod sistergroup r
34                                              Lungfish de novo transcriptome assembly and differential
35 isotype found only in cartilaginous fish and lungfish, demonstrating that IgD/W, like IgM, was presen
36 s and also highlights particular features in lungfishes different from actinopterygian fishes that re
37                        The lobe-finned fish, lungfish (Dipnoi, Sarcoptergii), have persisted for ~400
38  these with six previously described digital lungfish endocasts (4 fossil and 2 recent taxa) into a 1
39 ion has remained a dominant sense throughout lungfish evolution, and changes in the labyrinth may pot
40 golepis reveal the origin of the specialized lungfish feeding mechanism.
41 cal data indicate that the complete suite of lungfish feeding specializations may have arisen in as l
42  likewise upregulated during early stages of lungfish fin regeneration.
43 trapods(4,5), underscoring the importance of lungfish for understanding innovations associated with t
44 d illustrate the endocasts of six Palaeozoic lungfish from tomographic scans.
45 re observed in specimens of the other extant lungfish genera, Lepidosiren and Neoceratodus.
46                                          The lungfish genome continues to expand independently (its t
47                                          All lungfish genomes continue to expand as some transposable
48 separate pouches ventral to the utricle, the lungfish has a single large ventral pouch that contains
49                                        Thus, lungfish have evolved unique immunological adaptations t
50                       Given the relevance of lungfishes in evolutionary terms, the present study prov
51 ajor clades (turtles, tuatara, caecilian and lungfish) in the form of vocal recordings and contextual
52 pression is maintained in the adult brain of lungfishes, in distinct regions of the telencephalon (pa
53 d HPLC analysis in the CNS of the Australian lungfish indicates that a Leu-enkephalin-coding gene, di
54 kephalin cDNA from the CNS of the Australian lungfish indicates that the organization of this precurs
55                  Terrestrial movement in the lungfish is accomplished by planting the head and then p
56                                              Lungfish LAs are lymphocyte-rich structures associated w
57 possible absence of somatic hypermutation in lungfish LAs.
58 n (Protopterus annectens) and South American lungfishes (Lepidosiren paradoxa).
59          For months and up to several years, lungfish live inside a dry mucus cocoon that protects th
60 lation of oncogenes, developmental genes and lungfish LSGs.
61                       The 17 fully assembled lungfish macrochromosomes maintain synteny to other vert
62  complete nucleotide sequence of the African lungfish mitochondrial genome was used to estimate which
63 hat Palaeospondylus is the larval stage of a lungfish, most probably Dipterus valenciennesi Sedgwick
64                               The Australian lungfish Neoceratodus forsteri is the only extant specie
65 fish (Protopterus dolloi) and the Australian lungfish (Neoceratodus forsteri), as revealed by immunoh
66  chromosome-quality genome of the Australian lungfish (Neoceratodus forsteri), which is known to have
67  Leu-enkephalin in the CNS of the Australian lungfish, Neoceratodus forsteri, in a molar ratio compar
68 nomic analyses confirm previous reports that lungfish occupy a key evolutionary position as the close
69 an (Neoceratodus forsteri)(1) and African(2) lungfishes owing to enlarged intergenic regions and intr
70                                              Lungfish preadaptations to living on land include the ga
71 alin sequence was detected in the Australian lungfish proenkephalin cDNA.
72 tio comparable to mammals suggested that the lungfish proenkephalin precursor should contain the sequ
73           We found that a species of African lungfish (Protopterus annectens) uses a range of pelvic
74 ed terrestrial locomotion of a 35 cm African lungfish (Protopterus annectens; Dipnoi: Sarcopterygii)
75 esentative species of lungfishes, an African lungfish (Protopterus dolloi) and the Australian lungfis
76 ) of the mitochondrial genome of the African lungfish, Protopterus dolloi, was determined.
77 e sensory end organs of the inner ear of the lungfish, Protopterus, were examined using scanning and
78 rphs, euryhaline temnospondyls, coelacanths, lungfish, ray-finned fish, and sharks formed an unexpect
79                                              Lungfishes represent the first and longest-ranging linea
80 state of inflammation in the terrestrialized lungfish skin characterized by granulocyte recruitment.
81 ial and is not currently known in any fossil lungfish, substantial indirect information about it and
82 me physiological adaptation by which African lungfish survive dry seasons.
83 parsimony favored a lungfish/coelacanth or a lungfish/tetrapod sistergroup relationship depending on
84 r-joining and maximum likelihood supported a lungfish/tetrapod sistergroup relationship.
85 cells in the adult central nervous system of lungfishes, the closest living relatives of all tetrapod
86                            Here we show that lungfishes, the sister group of tetrapods, regenerate th
87 ating entopterygoid tooth rows like those of lungfish toothplates.
88                    Attempts to find AICDA in lungfish transcriptomes or by RT-PCR failed, indicating