How complex innovations can emerge seemingly out of nowhere is a central question of evolutionary biology. Researchers at the Leibniz Institute for the Analysis of Biodiversity Change (LIB) discovered new evidence that inflammatory immune responses can lay the foundation for the evolution of novel tissues. This process led to the emergence of a unique tissue called “plug”, which allows ricefish mothers to carry their offspring until hatching. Such an “innovative inflammation” not only revolutionized ricefish reproduction, but also played a key role in human evolution.
Evolution gave rise to many remarkable adaptations. These include the transformation of forelegs into flippers and even wings in marine mammals and bats, respectively. However, selection only acts on existing traits. It cannot act on traits that do not yet exist. Thus, evolutionary innovations that seemingly evolved out of nowhere have puzzled evolutionary biologists for a long time.
Now ricefishes, which are small freshwater fishes from the highlands of the Indonesian Island Sulawesi, provide new insight. In contrast to most fishes, pelvic brooding ricefishes do not deposit their eggs. Instead, they carry their eggs well-protected on their pelvic fins until hatching. This is made possible by a unique tissue: the plug. The plug forms inside the mothers’ womb after each mating and anchors thin strings, the so-called filaments, which are connected to the eggs. While numerous species form filaments to attach their eggs, e.g., to plants, the plug is only found in pelvic brooding ricefishes. But how can such a complex adaptation even evolve?
„The key insight is that recurrent inflammation can act like toolbox for evolution and thereby gave rise to the ricefish plug” explains Dr. Julia Schwarzer, Section head of Evolutionary Genomics at the Leibniz Institute for the Analysis of Biodiversity Change. There are parallels between pelvic brooding in ricefishes and pregnancy in us humans, because a modified inflammation also gave rise to mammalian embryo implantation.
By combining anatomical and molecular analyses, the researchers found that cells and signaling pathways involved in the formation of the ricefish plug usually control inflammation. Inflammation is triggered by injury or irritation of tissues and induces migration of immune cells, cell proliferation and sprouting of blood vessels. Hence, inflammation triggers a lot of processes that do not only serve wound healing, but could, in theory, also be recruited to build novel tissues like the plug.
“When the ancestors of pelvic brooders started to carry their eggs for longer periods of time, the filaments caused microscopic injuries in the reproductive tract”, explains Dr. Leon Hilgers, first author of the study who now works at the LOEWE Centre for Translational Biodiversity Genomics. The international team of researchers hypothesized that the subsequent inflammation was adapted in the course of evolution resulting in the origin of a novel tissue: the plug.
The novel insights of this study were published in the journal Current Biology and are not limited to ricefish evolution. Instead, they show that certain genes were independently recruited into the mammalian placenta and the ricefish plug. Thus, evolution found similar solutions in very different species.
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About the LIB
The LIB is dedicated to researching biodiversity and its changes, the results of which are disseminated to the wider society in an educational manner. In order to better understand the current mass extinction of flora and fauna, researchers are looking for connections and causes of – often – man-made changes. The goal is to develop solutions for the preservation of ecosystems and species in order to maintain the basis of current life.
About the Leibniz Association
The Leibniz Association combines 96 independent research institutes. Their focus ranges from the natural, engineering, and environmental sciences to the humanities and the business, space, and social sciences. The Leibniz institutes focus on relevant social, economic, and ecological issues. They perform knowledge-oriented and applied research (also among the cross-disciplinary Leibniz research alliances), are or support scientific infrastructures, and offer research-based services.
Dr. Julia Schwarzer
Section Head Evolutionary Genomics
j.schwarzer@leibniz-zfmk.de
Phone: +49 (0)2289122 426
Dr. Leon Hilgers
Postdoc/Researcher
Leon.hilgers@senckenberg.de
Phone: +49 (0)1575 3732230
Inflammation and convergent placenta gene co-option contributed to a novel reproductive tissue
Leon Hilgers, Olivia Roth, Arne W. Nolte, Alina Schüller, Tobias Spanke, Jana M. Flury, Ilham V. Utama, Janine Altmüller, Daisy Wowor, Bernhard Misof, Fabian Herder, Astrid Böhne and Julia Schwarzer
Current Biology (https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2021.12.004)
A brooding female oft the pelvic brooding species Oryzias eversi.
Leon Hilgers
Females of pelvic brooding ricefishes carry their eggs until hatching. Inside the mothers’ womb, a u ...
Jana M. Flury, edited by Leon Hilgers
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A brooding female oft the pelvic brooding species Oryzias eversi.
Leon Hilgers
Females of pelvic brooding ricefishes carry their eggs until hatching. Inside the mothers’ womb, a u ...
Jana M. Flury, edited by Leon Hilgers
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