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Jaw dropping: Scientists
reveal how vertebrates came to have a face
Date:
February 12,
2014
Source:
European Synchrotron Radiation
Facility
Summary:
Scientists present new fossil evidence for the origin
of one of the most important and emotionally significant parts of our anatomy:
the face. Scientists show how a series of fossils, with a 410 million year old
armored fish called Romundina at its center, documents the step-by-step
assembly of the face during the evolutionary transition from jawless to jawed vertebrates.
..............................
A team of
French and Swedish researchers have presented new fossil evidence for the
origin of one of the most important and emotionally significant parts of our
anatomy: the face. Using micron resolution X-ray imaging, they show how a
series of fossils, with a 410 million year old armoured fish called Romundina at its centre,
documents the step-by-step assembly of the face during the evolutionary
transition from jawless to jawed vertebrates.
The research
is published in Nature on 12 February 2014.
Vertebrates,
or backboned animals, come in two basic models: jawless and jawed. Today, the
only jawless vertebrates are lampreys and hagfishes, whereas jawed vertebrates
number more than fifty thousand species, including ourselves. It is known that
jawed vertebrates evolved from jawless ones, a dramatic anatomical
transformation that effectively turned the face inside out.
In embryos
of jawless vertebrates, blocks of tissue grow forward on either side of the
brain, meeting in the midline at the front to create a big upper lip
surrounding a single midline "nostril" that lies just in front of the
eyes. In jawed vertebrates, this same tissue grows forward in the midline under
the brain, pushing between the left and right nasal sacs which open separately
to the outside. This is why our face has two nostrils rather than a single big
hole in the middle. The front part of the brain is also much longer in jawed
vertebrates, with the result that our nose is positioned at the front of the
face rather than far back between our eyes.
Until now,
very little has been known about the intermediate steps of this strange
transformation. The scientists studied the skull of Romundina, an early
armoured fish with jaws, or placoderm, from arctic Canada. The skull is part of
a collection of the French National Natural History Museum in Paris.
Romundina has separate left and right nostrils, but they sit
far back, behind an upper lip like that of a jawless vertebrate. "This
skull is a mix of primitive and modern features, making it an invaluable
intermediate fossil between jawless and jawed vertebrates," says Vincent
Dupret of Uppsala University, one of two lead authors of the study.
By imaging
the internal structure of the skull using high-energy X-rays at the European
Synchrotron (ESRF) in Grenoble, France, the authors show that the skull housed
a brain with a short front end, very similar to that of a jawless vertebrate.
"In
effect, Romundina has the construction of a jawed vertebrate but the
proportions of a jawless one," says Per Ahlberg, of Uppsala University and
the other lead author of the study. "This shows us that the organization
of the major tissue blocks was the first thing to change, and that the shape of
the head caught up afterwards," he adds.
By placing Romundina
in a sequence of other fossil fishes, some more primitive and some more
advanced, the authors were able to map out all the main steps of the
transition.
"Without
the intense X-rays produced at the ESRF, we would not have been able to create
a virtual representation of the internal structures of the skull" said
Sophie Sanchez from The European Synchrotron (ESRF) in Grenoble.
Story
Source:
The above
story is based on materials provided by European Synchrotron Radiation Facility. Note:
Materials may be edited for content and length.
Journal
Reference:
- Vincent Dupret, Sophie Sanchez, Daniel Goujet, Paul Tafforeau, Per E. Ahlberg. A primitive placoderm sheds light on the origin of the jawed vertebrate face. Nature, 2014; DOI: 10.1038/nature12980