- cross-posted to:
- science@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- science@lemmy.ml
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/36298939
New research reveals that the DNA switches controlling human finger development originated from genes that regulated fish cloacas 380 million years ago[1].
“Rather than building a new regulatory system for the digits, nature has repurposed an existing mechanism, initially active in the cloaca,” explains developmental geneticist Denis Duboule from the University of Geneva[1:1].
The research team discovered this by comparing fish and mouse genomes, focusing on Hoxd genes. When they tagged DNA switches with fluorescent markers, these lit up in mouse digits but in fish cloacas. Deleting these genetic elements using CRISPR-Cas9 disrupted finger development in mice and cloaca formation in fish[1:2].
“The common feature between the cloaca and the digits is that they represent terminal parts,” notes geneticist Aurélie Hintermann. “Sometimes they are the end of tubes in the digestive system, sometimes the end of feet and hands”[1:3].
Now it makes sense why they’re called carpal joints, although I guess the metacarpal bones are closer to home on this one…but only the most anal would care about that.