Now on ScienceBlogs: Open Lab PSA

Seed Media Group

Pharyngula

Evolution, development, and random biological ejaculations from a godless liberal

Search

Profile

pzm_profile_pic.jpg
PZ Myers is a biologist and associate professor at the University of Minnesota, Morris.
zf_pharyngula.jpg …and this is a pharyngula stage embryo.
a longer profile of yours truly
my calendar
Nature Network
RichardDawkins Network
facebook
MySpace
Twitter
Atheist Nexus
the Pharyngula chat room
(#pharyngula on irc.synirc.net)

• Quick link to the latest endless thread




I reserve the right to publicly post, with full identifying information about the source, any email sent to me that contains threats of violence.

tbbadge.gif
scarlet_A.png
I support Americans United for Separation of Church and State.

Random Quote

I'm not dumb. I just have a command of thoroughly useless information

Bill Watterson, Calvin and Hobbes

Recent Posts


A Taste of Pharyngula

Recent Comments

Archives


Blogroll

Other Information

« Bad writers shouldn't piss off good writers | Main | Cephalopods get old? »

Evolution of vascular systems

Category: DevelopmentEvolutionMolecular BiologyScience
Posted on: December 19, 2006 6:56 PM, by PZ Myers

Once upon a time, in Paris in 1830, Etienne Geoffroy St. Hilaire debated Georges Léopole Chrétien Frédéric Dagobert, Baron Cuvier on the subject of the unity of organismal form. Geoffroy favored the idea of a deep homology, that all animals shared a common archetype: invertebrates with their ventral nerve cord and dorsal hearts were inverted vertebrates, which have a dorsal nerve cord and ventral hearts, and that both were built around or within an idealized vertebra. While a thought-provoking idea, Geoffroy lacked the substantial evidence to make a persuasive case—he had to rely on fairly superficial similarities to argue for something that, to those familiar with the details, appeared contrary to reason and was therefore unconvincing. Evolutionary biology has changed that — the identification of relationships and the theory of common descent has made it unreasonable to argue against origins in a common ancestor — but that difficult problem of homology remains. How does one argue that particular structures in organisms divided by 600 million years of change are, in some way, based on the same ancient organ?

One way is sheer brute force. Characterize every single element of the structures, right down to the molecules of which they are made, and make a quantitative argument that the weight of the evidence makes the conclusion that they are not related highly improbable. I'll summarize here a recent paper that strongly supports the idea of homology of the vertebrate and arthropod heart and vascular systems.

First, though, some of the differences. Diagram A, below, illustrates some of the major differences between the two kinds of heart, besides whether they are dorsal or ventral. We're familiar with how our hearts are organized: we have a large muscular pump that drives blood through a closed, high pressure vascular system. Blood is confined entirely to the arteries and veins, and nutrients filter through the epithelial walls of the capillaries to reach other tissues. Insects have an open circulatory system. The 'blood', called hemolymph, simply saturates everything, and the heart is a muscular tube that makes peristaltic motions to keep the fluid churning and flowing. It sounds crude and primitive, but it is very efficient.

vas_derivation.jpg
Blood cells, vascular cells and nephrocytes. A: Blood cells in closed (top) and open (bottom) vascular systems. B: Close ontogenetic relationship between cells of the vascular system, blood and excretory system.

The bottom diagram, B, illustrates a significant closed ontogentic relationship in development. All this means is that a certain linked set of specialized cells are all drawn from the same pool of cells early in development—they are all related by developmental ancestry. In this case the cell types that are all linked are 1) the hemocytes, or various blood cells; 2) the vascular system walls, the endothelia and mesothelia that build blood vessels, and 3) the nephrocytes, or cells that make the linings of the excretory system.

You might be thinking that that third one sounds like it doesn't quite belong, but it actually makes perfect sense. All of these cells contribute to the maintenance of the coelomic space, the fluid filled cavity lined by mesoderm in which your organs are sloshing around right now. Embryonically, the excretory is a system of tubes through which coelomic fluid flows and is filtered before being lost; our blood vessel system is similarly a system of tubes through which fluid flows, allowing other tissues to extract nutrients. It's actually not at all surprising that these similar functional elements have a similar developmental origin.

In vertebrates these three tissues are initially derived from the same pool of cells, and in Drosophila a similar phenomenon is observed: the progenitors of the heart (cardioblasts), blood cells (hemangioblasts), and the nephrocytes are drawn from the same pool of mesodermal tissue. That the same developmental relationships between this triad of cell types exists in both lineages is suggestive that we're also seeing a preserved evolutionary relationship. One could argue, though, that the similarity in embryonic function and their relationship to the coelom imposes a functional constraint, and that's why vertebrate and invertebrate systems resemble one another in this regard. It's simply a likely outcome of building plumbing.

It's when we get into the details of that plumbing that we start to see an accumulation of similarities that cannot be accounted for by mere coincidence, or by the necessity of convergence. Below is a complicated table, but here's the basic explanation: it's a parts catalog. It's addressing the question of how many parts are shared in the construction of the hearts of insects and mammals.

The way it was made was to start with the Berkeley Drosophila Genome Project, the BDGP database. This database allows one to search for genes by their embryonic expression pattern; in this case, all the fly genes that are expressed in the dorsal vessel or heart of the fly, but not in other muscles, were extracted. 62 genes were found in this way that have functions specifically in the heart, but not in other more mundane cellular functions. Of these 62, 53% have vertebrate orthologs, and those genes were pulled out and are listed below.

The left column, CG, contains an identification number which makes it easy to look up in the fly database. All of these genes are expressed in the fly heart, remember. The "Mouse/Human" column identifies the vertebrate ortholog of that gene. The remaining columns list where the gene is expressed in the mouse or human, and the question being asked is whether these fly heart genes also play a role in the formation and function of the vertebrate heart (or blood vessels or kidney; recall that those three tissues are all developmentally related!) If they are, you'd expect many of these genes to be active in vertebrate heart formation, sharing roles in both flies and people. I think you can see the result: over half are found in the vertebrate heart, and others are in those related tissues, blood vessels and kidneys.

CGFly gene
Symbol
Mouse/HumanHeartBlood vesselsKidneyOthers
CG1049Cct1Pcyt1a/PCYT1AHeart/Skeletal musclesnonoothers
CG1242Hsp83HSPCA/humanHeartlymphocytenoothers
CG1429Mef2Mef2c/mouse
Mef2A/Human
Heart
Heart/Skeletal muscles
Aorta, cardiovascular
placenta
others
CG2969AtetAbcg1/mouseHeartBlood vesselsMeso/metaothers
CG3132Ect3Glb1/mouse
GLB1/human
noBone marrow leukocytesothers
CG3171Tre1GPR84/humanHeartNeutrophils eosinophilskidneyothers
CG3268phtfPhtf2/mouseHeartBone marrow
CG3365drongoHrb/mouse
HRB/human
Tumor, placenta
CG3722Shg*
CG4058Nep4Mme/mouse
MME/human
Heart/Skeletal musclesLeukemic cellsKidney
CG4262elavElavl1/mouse
ELAVL1/human
Heart/Skeletal muscles
Breast carcinoma
CG4451Hs6stHs6st1/mouseHeartothers
CG5408trblTrib2/mouseHeartAorta, lymphocytekidneyothers
CG5661Sema-5CSema-5AHeart/Skeletal muscleskidney
CG5772SurAbcc9/mouseHeartkidneyothers
CG6281TimpTimp2/mouseHeart/Skeletal muscleskidneyothers
CG6605BicDBicd1/BICD1Heart/Skeletal muscleskidneyothers
CG6811RhoGap68FarhGap1/mouse
ARH1/human
HeartMammary gland tumor
Platelets, fibrosarcoma
kidneyothers
Cg7033Cct2/mouse
CCT2/human

B cell lymphoma, platelets
others
CG7223htlFgfr2/mouseHeartkidneyothers
CG7524Src64BSrc/mouseHeart/Skeletal musclesPlacenta eosinophilskidneyothers
CG7867nufRab11fip4/mouseHeartMammary gland tumorothers
Cg7895tinNkx2-5/mouse
NKX2-5/human
Heart/cardiac muscles
Heart
kidneyothers
CG8049Btk29ATec/mouse
TEC/human
Heartplacenta
blood
kidney
CG9256Nhe2Slc9a1/mouseHeartkidneyothers
CG9579AnnxAnxa6/mouse
ANXA6/human
ANXA8/human
HeartBlood progenitors, T lymphocytes
Placenta
leukemia
kidney
CG10275Cspg4/CSPG4noBlood vessels melanomametanephros
CG11331Spn27ASERPIN B3Carcinoma antigen
CG13521robo-1Robo-1/mouseBlood vesselsothers
CG17334lin-28Lin-28/mouseCardiac musclesmetanephrosothers
CG17927mhcMyh7/mouseHeart/Skeletal musclesothers
CG31043gurhNHS/humannoPlatelets, lymphocyteskidneyothers
CG31175Dys/DmDysDmd/mouseCardiac muscleskidneyothers
CG32858snFscn1/mouseHeart/Skeletal muscleskidneyothers
*Drosophila E- cadherin, shotgun(shg), is closely related to vertebrate VE-cadherin or paralogous cadherins, which are present in all possible tissues including heart, blood vessels, epithelial cells etc.

I am not entirely convinced by these data, though. One thing lacking is any indication with what frequency any random fly ortholog, one not associated with the dorsal vessel, might also be expressed in the vertebrate heart. Pleiotropy is the rule, as you can see by the "others" column (these genes are also active in many other vertebrate tissues), so I'd like to see some other comparative expression values. I'm more impressed by the correspondence of key regulatory genes, like tinman/Nkx2-5.

The totality of the similarity does add up to a good case for homology between the vertebrate and invertebrate heart, and the authors make a case for the evolutionary scenario illustrated here. It's interesting that acoelomate flatworms lack a discrete circulatory system, but they do have excretory epithelia—it implies that maybe the heart and blood vessels were cobbled together out of genetic pathways that were first pioneered in the building of the organism's sewage treatment system.

In the ancestral form, represented by a polychaete worm, a subset of mesothelial cells lining the coelom are specialized to form channels for the transport of fluids. This is where the homology lies, and where the homology is actually a little bit complicated. What's homologous between flies and vertebrates isn't the heart, precisely, but the developmental program that sets aside a portion of the mesodermal cells associated with the lining of the coelom and dedicates them to a vascular function.

vas_evo.jpg
(click for larger image)

Vascular structure and development. A: Acoelomate (e.g. platyhelminthes). Schematic cross section shows parenchyma, lined by musculature and intestine. The parenchyma contains various types of freely moving cells, among them the stem-cell-like neoblasts. Nephrocytes are integrated in the walls of mesodermally derived tubules, called protonephridia, that open to the outside. Drawing on left shows longitudinal section of protonephridium. B: Coelomate invertebrate (e.g. polychaete annelid). Schematic cross sections of embryo (bottom left) and adult (bottom right). Blood/vascular cells and nephrocytes are derivatives of the mesothelial coelomic wall, in particular its inner leaf (splanchnopleura). In the adult the coelom has expanded into the secondary body cavities filling the interior of the animal. Mesothelia line the inner side of the bodywall and the outside of the intestine. Blood vessels, shown at higher magnification at the top, are formed as clefts between the basal surfaces of the mesothelia. Blood vessel walls contain contractile myofibrils; nephrocytes are integrated in the vessel wall. C: Myxocoelomate (open coelom; e.g., insect). Schematic cross section of embryo (bottom left) and adult (bottom right). The embryonic mesoderm transiently forms coelomata with an inner layer (splanchnopleura) and outer layer. Blood/vascular cells originate from the cardiogenic mesoderm, located at the junction between the two layers. Vascular progenitors (cardioblasts) migrate dorsally, meet in the midline and form the myoepithelial dorsal vessel (top). Pericardial nephrocytes align themselves beside the dorsal vessel. D: Vertebrate. Schematic cross section of embryo (bottom left) and adult (bottom right). The lateral plate mesoderm of the embryo cavitates and forms the mesothelial walls of the coelomic cavities. Progenitors of the vascular system and blood derive from the lateral plate. The vascular system initially comprises endothelial cells (yellow). These cells recruit muscle cells (vascular smooth muscle cells; bright green) from the surrounding mesoderm. The cardiac mesoderm that produces the endothelial layer (endocardium) and muscular layer (myocardium) of the heart forms an anterior domain of the lateral plate. Excretory nephrocytes derive from the intermediate mesoderm located adjacent to the lateral plate.

Homologies can be very difficult to interpret, and we do have to be cautious about implying too much with a statement of homology, and I think the authors draw the line carefully enough:

In conclusion, comparative morphological and molecular data suggest that many similarities in the development and molecular control of blood and cardiovascular cells in ver tebrates and Drosophila are likely to reflect true homologies: the finding that, for example, blood cells and blood vessel cells in both systems derive from a common pool of progenitors (hemangioblasts) can be easily explained if one assumes that in the last common ancestor, mesothelial cells lining the coelom differentiated into both vascular cells and hemocytes. However, tentative homologies have to be carefully stated; there is no evidence, for example, that the Drosophila heart is any more "homologous" to the vertebrate myocardium, endocardium, or endothelia in general.

I think this is also where Geoffroy erred in his attempted synthesis. He tried to homologize detailed structures in the morphology of vertebrates and invertebrates, basing his ideas on a common root in the structure of the vertebra and trying to shoehorn the invertebrate pattern into a derived vertebrate structure. What we think is going on, though, is that the morphology of both groups is rooted in a generalized ancestral form that lacked anything resembling a vertebra and expressing only the most marginally recognizable rudiment of a heart, and that later forms have modified and elaborated upon that primitive form in radically different ways.


Hartenstein V, Mandal L (2006) The blood/vasculare system in a phylogenetic perspective. BioEssays 28:1203-1210.

Share this: Stumbleupon Reddit Email + More

TrackBacks

TrackBack URL for this entry: http://scienceblogs.com/mt/pings/28637

Comments

#1

Posted by: Epistaxis | December 19, 2006 7:41 PM

Etienne Geoffroy St. Hilaire debated Georges Lèopole Chrètien Frèdèric Dagobert, Baron Cuvier

FYI, your accent marks are all backwards: it should be "Georges Léopold Chrétien Frédéric Dagobert, Baron (de) Cuvier" ("de" is optional in English, but as long as you're going to the trouble of listing all his names...). Both grave accents (the kind you had) and acute accents (the kind you should have had) are used in French, and they have different meanings.

#2

Posted by: PZ Myers | December 19, 2006 7:47 PM

Dang French. Fixed now.

#3

Posted by: archgoon | December 19, 2006 8:42 PM

the identification of relationships and the theory of common descent has made it unreasonable to argue against origins in a common ancestor.

I'm a bit confused here, doesn't the theory of common descent basically assume that there is a common ancestor? Do you mean that the theory of common descent has made good predictions that were verified? Or did you just mean that the theory of common descent deals with problems that the scientists in 1830 would have raised? Sorry if this sounds nitpicky.

#4

Posted by: wright | December 19, 2006 8:44 PM

Fascinating stuff. A great example of how theory is reworked over long periods (in this case, the better part of two centuries) as evidence challenging the original ideas accumulates.

#5

Posted by: truth machine | December 20, 2006 11:01 AM

I'm a bit confused here, doesn't the theory of common descent basically assume that there is a common ancestor?

Science is based on evidence, not assumption. What would be the value of making such assumption? The theory of common descent is the body of evidence and reasoning that supports the thesis of common descent.

Do you mean that the theory of common descent has made good predictions that were verified?

The theory of common descent has produced extensive verified predictions. See, e.g., http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/comdesc/

#6

Posted by: PZ Myers | December 20, 2006 12:05 PM

All of the above, but what I meant by it was that theory is the lens through which we view data. Scientists in the 1830s were smart and well-educated, but they lacked the particular perspective we now have that allows Geoffroy's hypothesis to have great power.

#7

Posted by: Robert M. | December 20, 2006 12:48 PM

I haven't said this in a while, so here goes: thank you, Professor, for doing this. I'm glad you've (finally!) started working with a print-media outlet like Seed.

In addition to being fun, intelligent stuff for me to read at lunchtime, your writing helps me converse intelligibly with my med-student wife about basic biology. (c:

***
It's time to start looking for Casey Luskin and/or AiG claiming that, because the hypothesis of common descent has accumulated yet another line of strong evidence, Evolution Is Dead.

#8

Posted by: David Marjanović | October 2, 2007 4:58 PM

Dang French. Fixed now.

Léopold is still not fixed, and the de is still missing.

Very nice post, though! :-)

Post a Comment

(Email is required for authentication purposes only. On some blogs, comments are moderated for spam, so your comment may not appear immediately.)





           Sign in or register with TypePad.            Sign up with Movable Type.

Site Meter

ScienceBlogs

Search ScienceBlogs:

Go to:

Advertisement
Follow ScienceBlogs on Twitter
Visit the Collective Imagination blog
Advertisement

© 2006-2009 Seed Media Group LLC. ScienceBlogs is a registered trademark of Seed Media Group. All rights reserved.

Sites by Seed Media Group: Seed Media Group | ScienceBlogs | SEEDMAGAZINE.COM