Examples of deuterostome in the following topics:
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- These two groups are separated based on which opening of the digestive cavity develops first: mouth (protostomes) or anus (deuterostomes) .
- Deuterostome originates from the word meaning "mouth second. " Deuterostomes include more complex animals such as chordates, but also some simple animals such as echinoderms.
- Unlike protostomes, deuterostomes undergo indeterminate cleavage: cells remain undifferentiated until a later developmental stage.
- This characteristic of deuterostomes is reflected in the existence of familiar embryonic stem cells, which have the ability to develop into any cell type.
- In deuterostomes, the mesoderm pinches off to form the coelom in a process called enterocoely.
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- Animals that possess bilateral symmetry can be divided into two groups, protostomes and deuterostomes, based on their patterns of embryonic development.
- The deuterostomes, whose name translates as "second mouth," consist of two phyla: Chordata and Echinodermata.
- All chordates are deuterostomes, possessing a notochord.
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- For example, a previously-classified group of animals called lophophorates, which included brachiopods and bryozoans, were long-thought to be primitive deuterostomes.
- More recent research into the acoelomorphs has called this hypothesis into question and suggested a closer relationship with deuterostomes.
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- The bilaterally-symmetrical animals are further divided into deuterostomes (including chordates and echinoderms) and two distinct clades of protostomes (including ecdysozoans and lophotrochozoans).