• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Your Outer Ear Used To Be A Bit Of Respiratory Equipment

January 10, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

Mammalian ears are pretty damn strange. For humans, they’re a bit unsightly, they’re made of cartilage yet somehow sneak in three bones, and they get bigger as we age. Now, we’ve got a new weird ear fact to add to the list: they started out as gills.

Our ears used to be gills?

The outer ear, specifically. That’s the news from a new USC Stem Cell study that was looking into the evolutionary origin of the mammalian outer ear.

Advertisement

“When we started the project, the evolutionary origin of the outer ear was a complete black box,” said corresponding author Gage Crump in a statement, who is a professor of stem cell biology and regenerative medicine at the Keck School of Medicine of USC.

“We had been studying the development and regeneration of the jawbones of fishes, and an inspiration for us was Stephen Jay Gould’s famous essay An earful of jaw, which laid out how fish jawbones transformed into the middle ear bones of mammals. This made us wonder whether the cartilaginous outer ear may also have arisen from some ancestral fish structure.”

The adventures of elastic cartilage

Pull your ear forward and it’ll ping back, thanks to the elastic cartilage it’s made up of. Elastic cartilage is actually quite rare as tissue types go, and a pivotal clue during the team’s investigations was the discovery that gills are also made of elastic cartilage.

We don’t find gills in the fossil record, and with good reason. They don’t mineralize, which is a crucial step in the fossilization process, and the same is true of ears. That means fossil evidence is hard to find, but the team had another idea.

Advertisement

They adopted a new approach spearheaded by first author Mathi Thiruppathy, a PhD student in the Crump lab, that focused on something called enhancers. These are gene control elements in the form of DNA sequences that can increase the transcription of genes, and they tend to be tissue specific.

Enhancers at the ready

By incorporating the enhancers that form the human outer ear into the genomes of zebrafish, the team were able to observe that they were specifically active in the fish’s gills. They then flipped the experiment on its head by creating transgenic mice with zebrafish gill enhancers in their genomes, and saw that they were active in the outer ear of the mice. Like a cross-species game of snap, it revealed a connection between two structures that to the naked eye look completely unrelated.

Human outer ear enhancer driving green fluorescence protein expression in the gills of a 2 week old zebrafish.

Human outer ear enhancer driving green fluorescence protein expression in the gills of a 2-week-old zebrafish.

Image credit: Mathi Thiruppathy and the Gage Crump Lab

They continued on their enhancer adventures next in tadpoles, and saw that the enhancers were again active in the gills. When they took a leap forward to green anoles, the gill enhancers were showing up in their ear canal. Tracking its progress, the cartilage got more and more complex until we arrive at the outer ear of mammals.

From horseshoe crabs to humans

Exactly when this journey to the ear began is still up for question, but it had previously been recognized that horseshoe crabs have cartilage-like tissues. The team were able to isolate an enhancer for these animals and popped it in zebrafish, turning up the surprise result that it was active in their gills. At an impressive nearly 450 million years old (evolutionarily speaking), this takes the origins of elastic gills back much further than previously thought. From ancient marine invertebrates that bendy stuff has scuttled all the way to the sides of our faces, and we have a shiny new method for future research to boot.

Advertisement

“This work provides a new chapter to the evolution of the mammalian ear,” said Crump. “While the middle ear arose from fish jawbones, the outer ear arose from cartilaginous gills. By comparing how the same gene control elements can drive development of gills and outer ears, the scientists introduce a new method of revealing how structures can dramatically change during evolution to perform new and unexpected functions.”

The study is published in the journal Nature.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Cricket-Manchester test likely to be postponed after India COVID-19 case
  2. EU to attend U.S. trade meeting put in doubt by French anger
  3. Soccer-West Ham win again, Leicester and Napoli falter
  4. Lacking Company, A Dolphin In The Baltic Is Talking To Himself

Source Link: Your Outer Ear Used To Be A Bit Of Respiratory Equipment

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • There Is A Very Simple Test To See If You Have Aphantasia
  • Bringing Extinct Animals To Life: Is Artificial Intelligence Helping Or Harming Palaeoart?
  • This Brilliant Map Has 3D Models Of Nearly Every Single Building In The World – All 2.75 Billion Of Them
  • These Hognose Snakes Have The Most Dramatic Defense Technique You’ve Ever Seen
  • Titan, Saturn’s Biggest Moon, Might Not Have A Secret Ocean After All
  • The World’s Oldest Individual Animal Was Born In 1499 CE. In 2006, Humans Accidentally Killed It.
  • What Is Glaze Ice? The Strange (And Deadly) Frozen Phenomenon That Locks Plants Inside Icicles
  • Has Anyone Ever Actually Been Swallowed By A Whale?
  • First-Known Instance Of Bees Laying Eggs In Fossilized Tooth Sockets Discovered In 20,000-Year-Old Bones
  • Polar Bear Mom Adopts Cub – Only The 13th Known Case Of Adoption In 45 Years Of Study At Hudson Bay
  • The Longest-Running Evolution Experiment Has Been Going For 80,000 Generations
  • From Shrink Rays And Simulated Universes To Medical Mishaps And More: The Stories That Made The Vault In 2025
  • Fastest Cretaceous Theropod Yet Discovered In 120-Million-Year-Old Dinosaur Trackway
  • What’s The Moon Made Of?
  • First Hubble View Of The Crab Nebula In 24 Years Is A Thing Of Beauty… With Mysterious “Knots”
  • “Orbital House Of Cards”: One Solar Storm And 2.8 Days Could End In Disaster For Earth And Its Satellites
  • Astronomical Winter Vs. Meteorological Winter: What’s The Difference?
  • Do Any Animal Species Actively Hunt Humans As Prey?
  • “What The Heck Is This?”: JWST Reveals Bizarre Exoplanet With Inexplicable Composition
  • The Animal With The Strongest Bite Chomps Down With A Force Of Over 16,000 Newtons
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version