A Single Altered Gene Can Make Fish Fins More Like Limbs 
By Riley Black US Source: smithsonianmag 2/4/2021
Riley Black
Limbs can be incredibly useful. Whether it’s the wing of a bat, the elongated leg of a hopping frog or our own grasping arms, limbs have been adapted to all sorts of ecosystems and functions through the course of evolutionary time.

The earliest limbs date back to over 375 million years ago. The fossil record has beautifully documented how the fleshy fins of ancient fish became more and more limb-like and allowed our amphibious ancestors to come ashore. These creatures, like us, are known as tetrapods—or “four limbs.” Now a study on a modern fish familiar to aquarium enthusiasts has provided new insight into the genetic underpinnings of this transcendent change. Boston Children's Hospital biologist M. Brent Hawkins and colleagues published a study today in Cell that demonstrates mutations to either of two zebrafish genes can create a very limb-like fin in these fish. By using gene-editing techniques to replay the mutation in the lab, the researchers were able to pinpoint how some zebrafish grow fins that have more of a resemblance to our arms.
 

Finding the relevant genes started with looking for fish with particular mutations. The Harris Lab, of which Hawkins is a part, screened over 10,000 mutated animals for particular skeletal defects. Among those that stuck out were zebrafish that had extra bones in their fins. Much like lab mice and fruit flies, zebrafish are classic study animals for understanding genetics and development. They’re classified as teleosts—bony fish that support their fins on pointed rays. Only, some of the mutant zebrafish had fins that had extra bones. Not only that, but the new bones were attached to muscles and even formed joints, just like a limb. “Finding a fish with extra fin bones that should never be there was quite the ‘Eureka!’ moment,” Hawkins says.

Most striking of all was that the new bones required other changes to the fish’s anatomy. “Because development is an integrated process, this one mutation creates a new bone, but also creates a joint and brings along changes in musculature,” Hawkins says. With a single mutation, fins became something much more like arms. And so Hawkins and colleagues set about finding what could have been responsible for such a change.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
5551Studies shed light on impact of virus on farmed Atlantic salmon in B.C.THE CANADIAN PRESS2019-03-13CA
5552Scientific experts say fish virus poses low risk to Fraser River sockeyeThe Canadian Press2019-03-08CA
5553Study gives scientists unprecedented data on young Atlantic salmon in East Coast rivers The Canadian Press2019-03-15CA
5554Consistent fishing on Arrow LakesTrail Times2019-03-14CA
5555Province rolls out new fish and hunting licence systemCBC News2018-11-28CA
5556Why the Amazon River Can't Be Crossed By Bridgecntraveler2018-04-09BR
555723 Percent of Southern California Fish is Mislabeled 7SAN DIEGO2019-03-09US
5558Fishing for black crappie a Holland River shell gameYorkregion2019-03-11CA
5559A Look at the Rainbow Trout of KamloopsKamloops2019-03-01CA
5560Six new species of tentacle-faced fish discovered in AmazonThe Independent2019-03-07US
5561British mackerel has sustainable status stripped after years of overfishingindependent2019-03-06UK

219 220 221 222 of [222 - pages.]