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CRITICAL BIOLOGICAL PROCESSES AT WORK IN HUMANS WERE IN PLACE BEFORE ADVENT OF MULTICELLULAR LIFE ON EARTH
17 July 2003 - University of Wisconsin-Madison
| With the help of an obscure microorganism with ancient roots, scientists have discovered that critical biological processes at work today in humans and other animals were in place before the advent of multicellular life on Earth hundreds of millions of years ago. |
The findings, published today in the journal Science, provide a powerful new line of evidence that many of the genetic and cellular processes that exist in animals today arose before their origin from a common unicellular ancestor. "We've found that the cell biology tool kit was pretty sophisticated before the dawn of animals," says Sean Carroll, the senior author of the Science report and a professor of genetics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison's Howard Hughes Medical Institute. "There is no doubt these molecules have been co-opted. The same pathways we see in animals today were in place and working 600 million years ago." Plumbing the molecular workings of a modern, single-celled organism known as a choanoflagellate, Carroll and co-authors Nicole King and Christopher T. Hittinger found the same key signaling pathways that enable cells in animals to communicate and interact with one another. Such pathways, found previously only in animals, are involved in everything from cancer to the development of sensory functions such as hearing. "These were thought to be animal inventions," Carroll says. "But it seems that these pathways were in place and working" long before multicellular animals with distinct body plans and systems of organs arose from an ancient soup of microscopic protozoan life. While the use of these signaling pathways are generally known in animals, and are much studied by scientists, their functions in choanoflagellates remain a mystery, says King, the lead author of the Science report. Choanoflagellates are a phylum of transparent, single-celled microbes that propel themselves with whip-like appendages. A closer relative to animals than other single-celled organisms, they have an ancient lineage whose common ancestry with all animals dates back at least 600 million years. The new study chips away at a central question in animal evolution: how multicellular animals evolved from a protozoan ancestor. One notion of how that occurred, according to King, is that molecular pathways important to multicellular development evolved first in unicellular ancestors functioning, perhaps, in support of such things as food acquisition, mating and cell communication. Later, these pathways were co-opted for new roles in animal development. "This is consistent with the idea of evolution as a tinkerer, cobbling together tools that are already available, rather than inventing a new widget for each job," King explains. "The expression in choanoflagellates of proteins involved in cell interactions in (animals) demonstrates that they evolved before the origin of animals and were later co-opted for development," the group writes in the Science report. Using the tools of modern molecular biology, scientists are developing new ways to look back in time, to ages that predate physical evidence such as fossils. These powerful techniques are beginning to help flesh out the details of life during a time from which there is virtually no fossil record. For instance, the use of choanoflagellates, says Carroll, is an exercise in comparative genomics, which can help identify "the minimal set of genes in place at the outset of evolution by revealing those shared by all animals and their nearest relatives."
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In achievement and prestige, the University of Wisconsin-Madison has long been recognized as one of America’s great universities. A public, land-grant institution, UW-Madison offers a complete spectrum of liberal arts studies, professional programs and student activities. Many of its programs are hailed as world leaders in instruction, research and public service.The university traces its roots to a clause in the Wisconsin Constitution, which decreed that the state should have a prominent public university. In 1848, Nelson Dewey, Wisconsin’s first governor, signed the act that formally created the university, and its first class, with 17 students, met in a Madison school building on February 5, 1849. From those humble beginnings, the university has grown into a large, diverse community, with about 40,000 students enrolled each year. These students represent every state in the nation, as well as countries from around the globe, making for a truly international population. UW-Madison is the oldest and largest campus in the University of Wisconsin System, a statewide network of 13 comprehensive universities, 13 freshman-sophomore transfer colleges and an extension service. One of two doctorate-granting universities in the system, UW-Madison’s specific mission is to provide "a learning environment in which faculty, staff and students can discover, examine critically, preserve and transmit the knowledge, wisdom and values that will help insure the survival of this and future generations and improve the quality of life for all." The university achieves these ends through innovative programs of research, teaching and public service. Throughout its history, UW-Madison has sought to bring the power of learning into the daily lives of its students through innovations such as residential learning communities and service-learning opportunities. Students also participate freely in research, which has led to life-improving inventions from more fuel-efficient engines to cutting-edge genetic therapies. Students, faculty and staff are motivated by a tradition known as the "Wisconsin Idea," described by UW President Charles Van Hise in 1904 as the compelling need to carry "the beneficent influence of the university ... to every home in the state." The Wisconsin Idea permeates the university’s work and helps forge close working relationships among university faculty and students and the state’s industries and government. |
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