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  1. Hormone signaling in evolution and development: a non‐model system approachs.Andreas Heyland, Jason Hodin & Adam M. Reitzel - 2005 - Bioessays 27 (1):64-75.
    Cooption and modularity are informative concepts in evolutionary developmental biology. Genes function within complex networks that act as modules in development. These modules can then be coopted in various functional and evolutionary contexts. Hormonal signaling, the main focus of this review, has a modular character. By regulating the activities of genes, proteins and other cellular molecules, a hormonal signal can have major effects on physiological and ontogenetic processes within and across tissues over a wide spatial and temporal scale. Because of (...)
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  • Environmental Oxygen is a Key Modulator of Development and Evolution: From Molecules to Ecology.Ingrid Rosenburg Cordeiro & Mikiko Tanaka - 2020 - Bioessays 42 (9):2000025.
    Oxygen is a key regulator of both development and homeostasis and a promising candidate to bridge the influence of the environment and the evolution of new traits. To clarify the various ways in which oxygen may modulate embryogenesis, its effects are reviewed at distinct organizational levels. First, the role of pathways that sense dioxygen levels and reactive oxygen species are reviewed. Then, the effects of microenvironmental oxygen on metabolism, stemness, and differentiation throughout embryogenesis are discussed. Last, the interplay between ecology (...)
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