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Evolution of fins and limbs linked with that of gills

By Super Admin
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Washington, March 24 (ANI): A new research has suggested the genetic toolkit that animals use to build fins and limbs is the same genetic toolkit that controls the development of part of the gill skeleton in sharks.

The research was conducted by Andrew Gillis and Neil Shubin of the University of Chicago, and Randall Dahn of Mount Desert Island Biological Laboratory.

"In fact, the skeleton of any appendage off the body of an animal is probably patterned by the developmental genetic program that we have traced back to formation of gills in sharks," said Andrew Gillis.

"We have pushed back the evolutionary origin of the developmental genetic program that patterns fins and limbs," he added.

This new finding is consistent with an old theory, often discounted in science textbooks, that fins and (later) limbs evolved from the gills of an extinct vertebrate.

"A dearth of fossils prevents us from definitely concluding that fins evolved from gills. Nevertheless, this research shows that the genetic architecture of gills, fins and limbs is the same," said Gillis.

The research builds on the breakthrough discovery of the fossil Tiktaalik, a "fish with legs," by Neil Shubin and his colleagues in 2006.

"This is another example of how evolution uses common developmental programs to pattern different anatomical structures," said Shubin, who is the Associate Dean of Organismal and Evolutionary Biology at the University of Chicago.

"In this case, shared developmental mechanisms pattern the skeletons of vertebrate gill arches and paired fins," he added.

The research also showed for the first time that the gill arch skeleton of embryonic skates (a living relative of sharks that has gill rays) responds to treatment with the vitamin A derivative retinoic acid in the same way a limb or fin skeleton does, by making a mirror image duplicate of the structure as the embryo develops.

According to the researchers, the genetic circuitry that patterns paired appendages (arms, legs and fins) has a deep evolutionary origin that actually predates the origin of paired appendages themselves.

"These findings suggest that when paired appendages appeared, the mechanism used to pattern the skeleton was co-opted from the gills," Gillis said.

"Perhaps we should think of shark gills as another type of vertebrate appendage-one that's patterned in essentially the same way as fins and limbs," he added. (ANI)

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