You are assuming facts not in evidence. The authors of the actual paper did not engage in such flights of fancy. They determined an ancestral Toll-like gene was present. Similar Toll-like genes are found in fish. These Toll-like genes and more are found in humans.
Only one Toll-like gene is involved in endotoxin recognition in humans. This is TLR-4. It is found in most ray-finned fish (deleted in at least one species), as I demonstrated on the previous thread in which I tried to pound this information into your head. TLR-4 is involved in endotoxin recognition in mammals but may have a different function in fish. It is not present at all in coral.
Unfortunately your brain appears to be refusing new synaptic connections right now so the information slipped away as if down a clear mountain stream without making a dent in your memory last time I presented it. Maybe I'll have better luck this time.
That's a specious argument that depends on casual observers falling for obfuscation of TLR and TLR-4 genes with that of traits.
Coral has sophisticated endotoxic recognition and signaling (see link above) traits, but Fish do not.
Humans do.
That's the self-same genetic code-skipping that has you in such a wad.
Pity.