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Hormone still rules no-tadpole frogs.


Skipping most of the tadpole tadpole, larval, aquatic stage of any of the amphibian animals. After hatching from the egg, the tadpole, sometimes called a polliwog, is gill-breathing and legless and propels itself by means of a tail.  business, a coqui frog hops out of the egg as a miniature adult, smaller than a pea. Even so, it doesn't escape the king of tadpole chemistry, thyroid hormone Thyroid hormone

Any of the chemical messengers produced by the thyroid gland, including thyrocalcitonin, a polypeptide, and thyroxine and triiodothyronine, which are iodinated thyronines. See Hormone, Thyrocalcitonin, Thyroid gland, Thyroxine
, say Canadian researchers.

In most mainland U.S. frogs, a surge of thyroid hormone tells a tadpole to grow up into a frog shape. However, hundreds of other frog species, mostly in the tropics tropics, also called tropical zone or torrid zone, all the land and water of the earth situated between the Tropic of Cancer at lat. 23 1-2°N and the Tropic of Capricorn at lat. 23 1-2°S. , have lost the tadpole stage.

"How do you get rid of a whole life stage?" wonders Richard P. Elinson of the University of Toronto Research at the University of Toronto has been responsible for the world's first electronic heart pacemaker, artificial larynx, single-lung transplant, nerve transplant, artificial pancreas, chemical laser, G-suit, the first practical electron microscope, the first cloning of T-cells, .

One scenario would be to escape thyroid hormone control. Previous work had shown that coqui frogs still need the hormone to form proper rumps, but biologists had speculated that it had little other function.

Not so, report Elinson and Elizabeth M. Callery of the State University of New York (body) State University of New York - (SUNY) The public university system of New York State, USA, with campuses throughout the state.  at Stony Brook Stony Brook may refer to:

Massachusetts:
  • Stony Brook, a tributary of the Charles River in Boston
  • Stony Brook (MBTA station) on the Orange Line in Jamaica Plain
  • Stony Brook (B&M station), a former Boston and Maine Railroad station in Weston
. While still in their eggs, coqui frogs undergo a metamorphosis ruled by thyroid hormone, the researchers argue in a paper scheduled for the March 14 PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, usually referred to as PNAS, is the official journal of the United States National Academy of Sciences. . "We propose a new model for the evolution" of frogs that develop directly, they say.

The apricot-size coqui frogs set the Puerto Rican dusk vibrating vibrating,
v using quivering hand motions made across the client's body for therapeutic purposes.
 with the "co-key, co-key" call of males. "It's very high-pitched, very loud, very bright--it's wonderful," Elinson recalls. Females that agree lay clear eggs on a dry spot and hop away, leaving the males to sit on the clutch until the eggs hatch in about 3 weeks. Eggs can dry out fast, so coqui males leave their clutch only to find a quick meal and to defend the eggs from foraging males.

When Elinson sees curled-up miniature adults in mature eggs in the laboratory, he jiggles their dish to trigger hatching. "They'll all hatch at once, popping out of their eggs in just a few minutes," he says. "The babies are fabulous." They're hard to raise, however, because they need tiny, live food. "Even a fruit fly is a bit too big," Elinson notes.

He and Callery discovered that the genes for two thyroid hormone receptors switch on about 2 weeks after the eggs are laid. When researchers treated younger eggs with the drug methimazole to block hormone formation, development stalled for a range of features, including limb length, jaw shape, skin texture, and color. Giving thyroid hormone to the treated eggs restarted the maturation. Blocking hormone formation later didn't stop development.

The study brings welcome clarity to the role of thyroid hormone, comments Donald D. Brown of the Carnegie Institution of Washington's embryology embryology

Study of the formation and development of an embryo and fetus. Before widespread use of the microscope and the advent of cellular biology in the 19th century, embryology was based on descriptive and comparative studies.
 department in Baltimore (SN: 7/17/99, p. 43). He says that he's especially interested in the list of organs affected by the hormone. "It's a nice paper," he says.

Some sea urchins, mollusks, and insects have, like coqui frogs, lost a larval stage, notes Rudolf A. Raff of Indiana University in Bloomington. The unusual life plans mix radical cuts in some processes with perfect conservation of others. As he puts it, "What you're seeing are the vagaries of evolution."
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Title Annotation:research on thyroid hormone in coqui frogs
Author:Milius, S.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Mar 11, 2000
Words:504
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