Researchers find a genetic link between the human brain and a
sea-dwelling worm. The finding suggests that, to capture the entire
evolutionary picture, biologists need to cast a wider net, to include
animals that don't look alike.
An adult acorn worm with its proboscis on the bottom right and tail on the top left.
Biologists may need to rethink where to look for evolutionary changes
responsible for the origin of vertebrates, including humans, as a
result of research at Stanford University and the University of Chicago.
Chris Lowe and Ari Pani, biologists at Stanford's Hopkins Marine Station,
discovered some of the essential genetic machinery previously thought
exclusive to vertebrate brains in a surprising place – a sea dwelling,
bottom-feeding acorn worm, Saccoglossus kowalevskii.
These worms lack vertebrate-like brains, and are, in fact, separated
from vertebrates by over 500 million years of evolution. The worms are
even classified in a different phylum, the hemichordates.
"The closer we looked, the more similarities we found between these
strange worms and vertebrate brains in their underlying molecular
blueprints," said Lowe, an assistant professor of biology. "This
suggests that essential parts of these blueprints, previously thought to
be unique to complex brains, have much earlier evolutionary origins." A
research paper by Lowe, graduate student Pani and collaborators was
published this week in Nature.
The researchers say this discovery shows the need to consider that
modern animals may have lost certain ancient processes and traits, and
that biologists need to cast a wide net – including under-investigated
and different-looking animals – in order to capture the entire
evolutionary picture.
The research
As the brain develops in a vertebrate embryo, key genetic signaling
centers lay the chemical foundation for brain development, like
scaffolding for a building. Researchers previously thought that
important elements of this scaffolding were exclusive to humans and
other vertebrates, since they are absent elsewhere, even in close
relatives of vertebrates.
In particular, most of the centers are lacking in a small, fishlike
organism called amphioxus, commonly thought to be the best living
example of the first chordates because they share many anatomical,
developmental and genetic characteristics with vertebrates.
That absence led to the theory that several brain signaling centers
evolved in early vertebrates in conjunction with more advanced parts of
the brain, like the forebrain, the region responsible for higher thought
processes. However, the Lowe lab's surprising finding shows that the
scaffolding has much deeper roots in the tree of life – before humans,
vertebrates and acorn worms – in a mysterious common ancestor.
More broadly, because vertebrates share these essential, hidden,
brain-making processes with squirming, spineless acorn worms, biologists
need to search beyond looks to find common genetic and evolutionary
similarities.
Searching for vertebrate origins
From the earliest days of evolutionary biology, when Charles Darwin
compared the beaks of Galapagos finches, scientists compared animals to
each other by looking at sizes, shapes and arrangements of body parts.
Using those methods, many scientists theorized that amphioxus, also
known as the lancelet, is a sort of living fossil that marks the
transition from invertebrates to vertebrates. The small, fish-like
lancelet looks more like vertebrates than any other invertebrate,
sharing many anatomical similarities with vertebrates, including a
central nervous system with a hollow nerve cord running down the back, a
firm, supportive notochord beneath it, a true tail and segmented muscle
blocks.
But anatomy is only part of the picture.
Over the past few decades, evolutionary biologists have capitalized
on new biomedical technologies to peer beyond the surface of animals to
the genetic "blueprints" that ultimately control the growth of
anatomical structures. Using those tools, Lowe previously found that
many important genes in acorn worm embryos were active in similar
locations of the body as in mice and other vertebrates, despite their
lack of anatomical similarities.
In this study, Lowe and Pani focused on brain origins – looking for
the molecular signatures of three vertebrate brain-signaling centers.
The signaling centers, like the scaffolding for a building, provide a
framework for organizing proteins and cells.
The presence of these particular genetic signaling centers in a
hemichordate was completely unexpected, based on previous studies from
closer vertebrate relatives. These new results intriguingly indicate
that amphioxus lost many of those genetic processes, even though it
possesses a rather complex central nervous system more similar to
vertebrates than hemichordates.
"No one thought hemichordates would be that informative in understanding the origin of vertebrates," Lowe said.
"These findings remind us that modern animals are all at the 'tips
of the branches' of the evolutionary tree," Lowe said. "And when we are
searching for evidence about what our common ancestors were like, we
have to look at all the branches to find the right clues."