Male Pregnancy
By UPLANA
@UPLANA (3159)
India
December 21, 2006 12:42am CST
Gene “archaeology” sheds light on male pregnancy
A bit of “genetic archaeology” may be illuminating one of the fish world’s great mysteries, researchers say: how did a family of fish come to embrace male pregnancy?
The seahorse Hippocampus erectus (courtesy NOAA)
Research in the gulf pipefish hints that a gene originally busy with kidney and liver functions may have learned new ones in the male womb, said April Harlin-Cognato, a zoologist at Michigan State University in East Lansing, Mich.
“We’re interested in the evolution of novelty,” Harlin-Cognato said. “We’re wondering if it’s a matter of old genes gaining new tricks.”
Gulf pipefish are a member of the same family as seahorses, which they in fact resemble, except for the curved tails.
As with seahorses, the male fish accepts eggs from females, fertilizes them and carries them in a pouch, a complex organ that nurtures and protects the eggs. One of its functions is to regulate saline content in the womb, according to Harlin-Cognato.
She and colleagues found a new gene that makes a type of protein molecule called an astacin—one a family of proteins found in bony fish.
The gene, which the researchers dubbed patristacin, appears to support the pouch, but this wasn’t its original job, she argues. Members of her team suspect that patristacin, possibly thousands of years ago, was involved in kidney and liver function, and was later drafted into a “moonlighting” gig supporting the then-newfangled male brood pouch. Patristacin is found in the brood pouch of pipefish and seahorses and in the kidney and liver of bony fish.
“We know the gene codes for a protein in the brood pouch during male pregnancy, but we don’t know yet what it is doing in the brood pouch. It’s a whole new ball of wax to understand how this gene functions in its new job,” Harlin-Cognato said.
The team’s study appears in the Nov. 4 edition of the research journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
“The genes show you ancestry,” she said. “They show you the overall family tree and can tell you when things took place during the evolution of a new structure. From this family tree we can make educated guesses about the structure and function of these proteins.”
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