An Earful of Gill: Stem Cell Study Points to Evolutionary Origin of Outer Ear | Super Innovators

Zebrafish were used in this comparative study. Credit: Lynn Ketchum

MBLAssociate Scientist J. Andrew Gillis co-authored , which demonstrates that the mammalian outer ear shares gene regulatory programs with the gills of fishes and amphibians. 

The outer ear is unique to mammals, but its evolutionary origin has remained a mystery. 

According to a new study published in Nature from the USC Stem Cell lab of Gage Crump, this intricate coil of cartilage has a surprisingly ancient origin in the gills of fishes and marine invertebrates. 

鈥溾榃hen we started the project, the evolutionary origin of the outer ear was a complete black box,鈥 said corresponding author Crump, professor of stem cell biology and regenerative medicine at the Keck School of Medicine of USC.鈥 

鈥溾榃e had been studying the development and regeneration of the jawbones of fishes, and an inspiration for us was Stephen Jay Gould鈥檚 famous essay 鈥楢n earful of jaw,鈥 which laid out how fish jawbones transformed into the middle ear bones of mammals.鈥欌 

鈥淭his made us wonder whether the cartilaginous outer ear may also have arisen from some ancestral fish structure.鈥 

The first clue toward cracking this mystery was the team鈥檚 discovery that gills and outer ears are both composed of a relatively rare tissue type: elastic cartilage.

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Source: An Earful of Gill: Stem Cell Study Points to Evolutionary Origin of Outer Ear | Super Innovators