NEWS
New chemical language of neural systems is revealed
- Comb jellies – a seemingly simple form of marine life — took a radically different path to neural complexity than the rest of the animal kingdom, a finding that could have implications for synthetic and regenerative medicine
- CRG researchers collaborated by assembling the genome of Pleurobrachia bachei from raw data.
- The findings would reclassify comb jellies, reshaping two centuries of zoological thought, and imply that there are many ways to “make an animal” with neural and muscular systems
- The research was published in Nature last week
Researchers from the Whitney Laboratory for Marine Biosciences of the University of Florida decode the genomic blueprints for 10 ctenophore – or comb jelly – species. Their analysis suggests these beautiful sea creatures form the first branch on the animal kingdom’s Tree of Life.
In a remarkable evolutionary twist, ctenophores independently developed complex organs, neurons, muscles and behaviors that are far more sophisticated than sponges, which previously were viewed as the earliest lineage and do not have neuro-muscular systems.
The findings would reclassify comb jellies, reshaping two centuries of zoological thought, and imply that there are many ways to “make an animal” with neural and muscular systems, said Leonid Moroz, head of the team and first author of the study.
“This paper is also distinct from other studies because it, for the first time, unites microchemical and physiological approaches to validate genomic predictions,” said Moroz, a distinguished professor of neuroscience, genetics, chemistry and biology in the UF College of Medicine, McKnight Brain Institute and the Whitney Laboratory. “By revealing the unique molecular make-up of major features – the development, immune system, nerves and muscles – I can honestly introduce you to the aliens of the sea.
“If you met an alien you would assume it is radically different from us,” Moroz said. “There is no need to wait – these aliens are in our backyard.”
The Ctenophore or comb jelly Pleurobrachia bachei has a very unique neural organization suggesting that nervous system evolved more than once. (credit: Leonid L. Moroz (University of Florida)
While the rest of the animal kingdom evolved seemingly along one pathway, with a similar design of neural circuits and chemical language, the comb jelly evolved an alternative strategy with genetically different neural and muscular structures, and even development with unique mesoderm specification. The findings could lead to new ways to investigate neurodegenerative diseases, such as Alzheimer’s or Parkinson’s, and open new avenues for bioengineering, Moroz said.
“Some ctenophores can regenerate an elementary brain — also known as the aboral organ or gravity sensor — in 3 ½ days,” Moroz said. “In one of my experiments, one lobate ctenophore — Bolinopsis – regenerated its brain four times.”
In the Nature article, Moroz presents the draft comb jelly genome of Pleurobrachia bachei, the Pacific sea gooseberry together with extensive gene expression analysis in 10 other species including developmental stages. The article summarizes a nearly seven-year adventure around the globe by a vast international research team.
The team found that comb jellies are distinct from other animal genomes in their neurogenic, immune and developmental genes. Many genes controlling neural development in other animals are either absent or not expressed in comb jellies. Comb jellies do not use serotonin, dopamine, acetylcholine or most other neural transmitters that control brain activity in other animals. Instead, they might use a unique array of peptides and glutamate neural signaling, genetic editing and a diverse array of electrical synapses.
How to assemble the genome sequencing data
Fyodor Kondrashov, head of the Evolutionary Genomics lab at the CRG, and Inna Povolotskaya from the same lab, collaborated with Moroz team by assembling the genome of Pleurobrachia bachei from raw data.
"One of the major challenges in sequencing projects is to reconstruct the complete genome from very short error-prone fragments generated by the machine" says Kondrashov.
"This can be overcome by using different technologies available today. In order to reconstruct the genome we combined in total 8 different datasets produced by two technologies, Illumina and 454 Roche. The next-generation sequencing technologies open up new exciting possibilities to study genetics of non-model organisms" he adds.
Evolution took a different path
The evolution of a neural system parallel to that of other animals turns accepted beliefs upside down and rewrites accepted texts. The common idea was that neural complexity evolved in a single straightforward course: from very simple nerve nets all the way up to a human level of complexity along a single path. Comb jellies developed along a separate – though still complex – path and exhibit a new neurochemical language that does not exist in other animals.
“Our concept of nature was that there was only one way to make a neural system. We oversimplified evolution,” Moroz said. “There is more than one way to make a brain, a complex neural circuit and behaviors.”
The novel candidates for neurogenic and signaling molecules and receptors could open doors to new discoveries in synthetic biology, Moroz said. For many neurological diseases, a diagnosis is a “one-way ticket,” with treatments designed, at best, to stall decline, Moroz said.
“What if we could not only slow the progression of Parkinson’s or memory loss in aging, but reverse it?” Moroz asks. “Ctenophores show us that there is more than one design for a complex nervous and muscular organization. Nature is much more innovative than we thought.”
"Article adapted from the original PR from Whitney Lab at UFL, written by Cindy Spence, cindyrspence [at] ufl.edu
For more information:
- Source of the study: Leonid Moroz, moroz [at] whitney.ufl.edu
- Press Officer CRG - Juan M. Sarasua - juan.sarasua [at] crg.eu