On the Evolutionary Gold Mine Down Under
What the platypus and other Australian species reveal about genetics
- By Dina Modianot-Fox
- Smithsonian.com, August 01, 2008, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Marsupial babies are born prematurely and develop typically in the mother's pouch, which makes them readily available for research into early development. "The marsupials," says Graves, "are more closely related to humans and mice than are monotremes. Their genomes are much more similar to those of placental mammals; same size, same sort of distribution of sequences, genomic imprinting, monophyletic sex chromosomes and at least a version of X chromosome inactivation."
Because both the monotremes and the marsupials are distantly related to us (the platypus split from our common ancestor 166 million years and the kangaroo 146 million years ago) they allow for some clear genetic comparisons. This is not the case with our fellow placentals, like mice, which are so close to us that it's difficult to determine the important genetic regions that remained unchanged over millions of years.
The kangaroo is the second marsupial to be sequenced. The genome of a South American species of opossum was published last year. The scientific community has published twenty mammalian sequences up until now, but that number is expected to increase dramatically as a result of technological advances and international cooperation. After the platypus and the kangaroo, the echidna could well be the next Australian native (it is also in New Guinea) to undergo genetic decoding. ARC Australian Research Fellow Frank Grützner of Adelaide University, who also participated in the platypus project, has been equipping some echidnas with radio transmitters and taking their DNA for sequencing.
But it's not just mammals that are receiving genetic scrutiny. Graves's lab is also looking at alligators, birds such as the emu, and even the nearly extinct corroboree frog.
"The genomics age has really been exciting for us who work on weird animals," she says. "We couldn't be happier."
Weird is certainly the term for the platypus—an Aboriginal legend maintained it was the offspring of a duck and a water rat—but evolution has equipped it nicely for its semi-aquatic lifestyle. Its flat tail acts as a rudder when it swims and is also a storage area for extra food. Its webbed front feet extend to aid in swimming, but on land fold back, allowing the claws to become spades for digging burrows in earth banks around rivers, lakes or streams. When it dives, it closes its nostrils as well as its eyes and ears (it has no outer ear lobe). But its flat bill locates food through unique electrical receptors that detect movement made by small prey such as insect larvae, shrimp and dragonflies.
The platypus is a real loner: mating is its only social interaction. Staff at South Australia's Warrawong Wildlife Sanctuary near Adelaide who have witnessed the mating ritual describe it as a ten-minute water dance, with the male initially holding the female's tail in his mouth as they swim and dive through the water. After mating, each partner returns to its burrow.
"I think the whole rational of using comparisons between distantly related animals to tell us about our own genomes is sometimes a bit lost in the ‘gee-whiz, how weird' aspects of the platypus genome," says Graves. "Comparative genomics is a terribly powerful strategy for exploring our own past."
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Comments (3)
Platypus's are really cute and furry. i love platypus's!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Posted by Kristy on April 23,2010 | 01:53 PM
For your info, yes, birds DO have a sort of belly button where the egg sack connected. It is an 'outie', and when exotic birds are raised in captivity their navel is often disinfected for safety.
Posted by Kit Kederich on August 15,2008 | 12:55 AM
I have wondered for years whether monotremes or marsupials have belly buttons. It would seem that they do not since neither have placentas. However, does a chicken have a belly button from the embryo's connection to the yolk sac? Perhaps you have the answer -- it so, please let me know. Thanks!
Posted by Sue Ellen Alishouse on July 27,2008 | 04:55 PM