Posted on 12/18/2001 5:07:16 PM PST by Map Kernow
LONG-LOST relatives of the human race have been traced for the first time. They live at the bottom of puddles. A family of humble microbes has been found to carry a special signalling gene that was previously known only in the animal kingdom. The discovery suggests that the single-celled creatures represent a vital staging post in evolution and that all animal life on Earth descended from something very like them.
The survivor from our ancient ancestors is the collar flagellate or choanoflagellate a microscopic organism that uses a sperm-like tail to swim through shallow water, grazing on bacteria that lodge in its feeding collars.
Its remarkable evolutionary legacy, which stretches back at least 600 million years, has been identified by researchers in the US. Today 150 species of collar flagellates exist around the world, but evolution also gave rise to a more complex lineage that eventually led to the animal kingdom.
They are the closest nonanimal organism to animals, said Sean Carroll, Professor of Genetics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, who led the research. They are to animals what chimps are to humans, and by studying some of their genetic characteristics, we can begin to make some strong inferences.
In the study, published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Professor Carroll and his colleague Nicole King analysed proteins from a species of collar flagellate called Monosiga brevicollis. They located a type of signalling gene, receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK), which sends messages to other genes telling them to become active or making them dormant. It is almost identical to similar version found in animals as diverse as humans and sponges.
The findings support strongly the idea that many genes that animals use today were already in place and available on the eve of animal evolution, but changed in function with the step forward to multicellular organisms with distinct body plans and systems of organs.
The microbes, which measure five thousandths of a millimetre in diameter, are protazoans simple organisms that were once regarded as animals but are now generally considered to be part of a separate kingdom, the single-celled protists.
Scientists consider the moment at which multi-celled animals, or metazoa, evolved from the protozoans to be one of the turning points in the history of life on Earth. The process is thought to have taken place about 600 million years ago.
The question is, who were the ancestors of animals and what genetic tools did they pass down to the original animals, Professor Carroll said. The evolution of the metazoa from the protozoans is one of the milestones in the history of life. To build a multicellular organism compatible with a multicellular lifestyle is something that is very difficult. It takes a lot of genetic machinery to do that, and you have to ask the question, did it all arise when the animals came along, or was some of it in place earlier? Were starting to get a glimpse of the genetic tool kit we have in common. In choanoflagellates, weve found genes that previously were believed only to exist in animals. Its a confirmation of the idea that the genes come first, before their exploitation by organisms.
The study concludes: We have discovered in M. brevicollis the first RTK, to our knowledge, identified outside the metazoa. The architecture . . . resembles that of RTKs in sponges and humans and suggests the ability to receive and transduce signals. Thus, choanoflagellates express genes involved in animal development that are not found in other eukaryotes (complex organisms), and that may be linked to the origin of the metazoa.
For me, this is the most interesting quote in the article. The master plan (genes) came first? What of "natural selection"? And was there an "author" of the plan?
Everybody now...
I'm no kin to the monkey.
The monkey's no kin to me.
I don't know about your ancestors,
But mine didn't swing from no tree.
It's quite an incredible and miraculous process we conscious beings emerged from, and I think we are just glimpsing a very small part of it.
Wanna BET?
I'm just saying it makes you wonder who designed the plan. ;-)
Or about spontaneously arising order, just like in a free market place. :)
Strangely though, it doesn't make you wonder who designed the designer.
Why not?
[head bobbing; breathy, avuncular tone of voice] There you go again! ;)
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