Engineering: Evolutionary clues unearthed
This breakthrough will provide important clues to the evolution of life on Earth.
Researchers, headed by biochemist Professor Pauline Schaap of the University of Dundee and evolutionary biologist Professor Sandie Baldauf of the University of York, have produced the first molecular ‘dictionary’ of the 100 or so known species of social amoeba.
Using this family tree, they have devised a model system to establish how single cell organisms communicate and interact to create multi-cellular structures in response to changing environmental conditions.
Previously, there was almost no molecular data for social amoeba - Dictyostelia - which are a hugely diverse and ancient group.
Social amoebas are a group of organisms with a genetic diversity that is greater than that of fungi and similar to that of all animals.
They offer an excellent experimental system for studying aspects of evolution and communication that are not easy to study in more complex multi-cellular organisms.
The York and Dundee teams have worked with field biologists in Germany, the US and Japan.
"This provides a starting point in allowing us to examine what happens at the molecular level as species evolve and mutate," said Professor Schaap, of the Division of Cell and Developmental Biology in the College of Life Sciences at Dundee.
"The availability of a family tree allows us to reconstruct the evolution of the signalling mechanisms that generate multicellularity.
"It also provides a powerful tool to identify core ancestral processes that regulate the most basic aspects of development."
Looking at single cell organisms
Professor Baldauf, of the Department of Biology at York, said: "We have investigated the evolution of plants and animals for a very long time but our whole eco-system depends on single cell organisms.
"If we want to look at the fundamentals of life we have to look at single cell organisms.
"Amoebas are some of the closest single cell relatives of animals so understanding how they work and evolve is important because it helps us to understand how animals evolve," she explained.
"We have developed a new model system for the study of the evolution of forms.
"We have written the dictionary. Now we know what the words are - but we still have to construct the sentences."
The research teams were able to build the family tree by amplifying and comparing highly conserved genes from all known species of social amoeba.
The existing family tree of the social amoeba was based on how the multicellular structures of each species look on the outside.
However, this tree was completely uprooted by the molecular data gathered by the researchers in Dundee and York.
By plotting all existing information of the amoebas’ cellular and multi-cellular shapes and behaviour to the molecular tree, it appeared that increased cell specialisation and organism size is a major trend in the evolution of social amoeba.
Professor Schaap and her team are now working to establish how the regulation and function of genes with important roles in development was altered and elaborated during the course of evolution to generate novel cell-types and morphological features.
The next step for Professor Baldauf and her team will be to investigate the origin of these amoebas, and also to search for new species and to establish their position on the family tree.
Meanwhile, a number of research projects, including teams in the USA and Germany, have won sponsorship to sequence the genomes of social amoeba species identified by the work in York and Dundee.
The Dundee-York project was funded under the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council’s CODE (COmparative DEvelopment) initiative and took four years to complete.
The research is published today in the international journal Science.
You’ve read it. Now review it.
Date Published: October 27, 2006
More by this source
|
Print
|
Send to a friend
|
Rate & Comment
|
Keep up to date
If you found this item fun or informative, please let others know. Simply send to a friend or recommend it to even more people - on any of the following sites:
Latest Science News | reddit | digg.com | del.icio.us | rollyo | stumbleupon
More on evolution...
Researchers get warm in quest to solve evolutionary mystery
Scientists believe they have cracked one of the most enduring mysteries since Charles Darwin returned from the Galapagos islands: why is there such a variety of life in the tropics?
Evolutionary software for free
Software can help scientists gain insight into the origin of life.
Half of Britons reject evolution, survey finds
Half of British adults do not believe in evolution, with at least 22% preferring the theories of creationism or intelligent design to explain how the world came about, according to a new survey.



