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Award details
Evolution of the vertebrate inner ear: a gene network approach
Reference
BB/S005536/1
Principal Investigator / Supervisor
Professor Andrea Streit
Co-Investigators /
Co-Supervisors
Institution
King's College London
Department
Craniofacial Dev and Stem Cell Biology
Funding type
Research
Value (£)
592,310
Status
Current
Type
Research Grant
Start date
01/05/2019
End date
30/04/2023
Duration
48 months
Abstract
Evolution of complex organs is thought to be driven by changes in the gene regulatory networks (GRNs) that control development: recruiting new components into ancestral GRNs allows the emergence of new cell types and cell behaviours. Alterations in the non-coding regulatory regions are hypothesised to drive such changes in network architecture. Here, we will systematically test this hypothesis to provide mechanistic insight into evolution of a complex sense organ, the ear, from basal chordates to higher vertebrates. We have recently established the GRN that controls inner ear commitment in a higher vertebrate, the chick, including the regulatory regions that integrate information. Like in chick, the ear in a lower vertebrate, the lamprey, arises from the otic placode, while the proto-placodal domain (PPD) in a lower chordate, Ciona, generates mechanoreceptor cells, like those in the vertebrate ear. First, we will establish which GRN components are present in the lamprey placode and the Ciona PPD using comparative gene expression. Second, we will identify the regulatory regions that control ear and PPD gene expression in lamprey and Ciona, respectively, using bioinformatics and ATACseq, and test their activity in vivo. This will complement our chick enhancer database providing a framework for studying how the GRN changed during evolution. Third, we will explore which regulatory inputs into ear and PPD genes are conserved and which diverge. We will determine the minimal elements required to drive reporters in the vertebrate ear, test their in vivo activity across all three species, and analyse changes in enhancer motifs. We will identify factors missing in the ancestral network, and attempt to engineer a vertebrate-like enhancer from ancestral Ciona enhancers.
Summary
The eye, nose and ear constantly provide signals from the environment that allow us to communicate with each other, to react to changes by adjusting our behaviour and to navigate the world throughout daily life. In all vertebrates, including humans, these sense organs are very complex and are concentrated in the head, while sensory structures in lower, non-vertebrate animals of the same phylum are much less sophisticated and generally consist of cells scattered across the body. It is therefore thought that a key feature that made the evolution of vertebrates possible is the emergence of sense organs: they allowed animals to move from a passive to a more active life style including hunting for food and escaping predators, and therefore to explore new habitats. Thus, understanding the evolution of sense organs is an important piece in the puzzle of understanding human evolution. Surprisingly, we know very little about the mechanisms that drove the formation of sophisticated sense organs, and this proposal addresses this question using the ear as a model organ. We have recently established the 'wiring diagram' that controls early ear development in a higher vertebrate, the chick, using modern molecular techniques. We have identified some of the key drivers that push stem cells towards ear identity, established how they act in a molecular hierarchy, and how these events are controlled by so called 'regulatory regions' in the DNA. With this blueprint for vertebrate ear formation, we can now ask: what was the ancestral 'wiring diagram' in a basic vertebrate, the lamprey, and the closest vertebrate relative, the sea squirt, and what are the molecular mechanisms that allowed the emergence of sophisticated sense organs? We will establish which of the components that we have identified in the chick are also present in the lamprey ear and in the 'ancestral ear' of the sea squirt. Molecules present in all three species will be part of the most ancient wiring diagram, while those present in lamprey and chick will characterise the vertebrate lineage. We have already characterised the regulatory regions that control the expression of ear genes in chick. Our hypothesis is that changes in these regulatory elements allowed the recruitment of new genes into the ancient ear wiring diagram and thus allowed evolution of sophisticated vertebrate ears. To test this hypothesis we will use bioinformatics and molecular approaches to identify similar regions in lamprey and the sea squirt, assess their activity across all three species and use molecular tools to characterise the most crucial parts of these elements. Comparison across species will allow us to define the most ancient molecular network in the closest relative of vertebrates, as well as the molecular events that increased complexity of the wiring diagram for ear formation during evolution. This project will therefore make an important contribution to our understanding of vertebrate evolution, in particular highlighting the events that allowed the emergences of sophisticated structures that define the function of human organs and are key to define human behaviour.
Impact Summary
The proposed project is multidisciplinary combining biology, molecular and computational approaches and addresses the fundamental question of how changes in developmental mechanisms allowed the evolution of complex organs like the ear. It cuts across several BBSRC priority areas: data driven biology, 3Rs in research using animals, systems approaches to biosciences and technology development in biosciences. There are various academic beneficiaries (see above) because the project addresses a basic biology question: how changes in the regulatory landscape led to the emergence of complex organs from lower chordates to higher vertebrates. These include researchers in the field of neuroscience and auditory biology, developmental, stem cell and systems biology, and evolutionary biology. Our data will be published in scientific journals, at conferences and through teaching and outreach events, with all genomics and experimental data being made publicly available. Therefore, these benefits will occur during the course of the project or shortly thereafter. In the proposed project we will only investigate some simple scenarios for changes in GRN architecture across evolution. However, our data will provide a rich resource for further studies and generate new testable hypotheses that can be explored by the research community in future. The project also has benefits beyond academia, although some may take longer to bear fruit. In particular, Evolution as a topic arouses a lot of interest in the general public and it is therefore easy to convey through public lectures, science fairs and engagement activities with pupils and students. Beneficiaries beyond academia will include - Training of highly skilled researchers in interdisciplinary research; this training will not only equip the PDRAs with skills for a career in science, but also with many transferable skills such as organisation, critical thinking, problem solving, modelling complex scenarios, cross-disciplinary interactions and many more. This will therefore contribute to strengthening the UK economy by providing highly skilled personnel for the academic or private sector. - Our new collaboration with an artist, Tabatha Andrews, will bring a new perspective into scientific thinking and approach to science. Tabatha's interest lies in sensory perception and how changes affect humans. We have planned a project entitled 'Knowing, Remembering, Listening: How do cells and people know who they are?'. This involves lab visits, a workshop and exhibit at King's Science Gallery and focuses on the concept of identity, memory and communication with respect to cells and humans. This will particularly benefit the personal and scientific development of the PDRA, and shape her/his ability for public engagement and science communication in the future. This is also an important training aspect for the PDRA, but will go beyond training to involve other scientists and general public alike. - The project will also have a focus on computational approaches; this will contribute to alleviating current shortage in bioinformatics skills by attracting new talent into this area. - Enhancing the international reputation of UK science will increase international collaborations. In particular, our collaboration with M. Bronner at Caltech, Pasadena will strengthen international links and enhance our global influence. - Enthusing young people to take up a career in science; our outreach activities specifically target young individuals as future talents (school pupils in short lab projects, school visits, KCL Science Gallery targeting the local young population, collaboration with an artist to create exhibits and run workshops). Evolutionary questions are excellent to capture the imagination of the general public, in particular children and teenagers. This will support the UKs ambition for strong science underpinning growth of the economy, entrepreneurial activities and industrial development.
Committee
Research Committee C (Genes, development and STEM approaches to biology)
Research Topics
Systems Biology
Research Priority
X – Research Priority information not available
Research Initiative
X - not in an Initiative
Funding Scheme
X – not Funded via a specific Funding Scheme
Associated awards:
BB/S005064/1 Evolution of the vertebrate inner ear: a gene network approach
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