It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.

Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.

Thank you.

 

Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.

 

Scientists grow a dinosaur leg on a chicken for first time

page: 1
3

log in

join
share:

posted on Mar, 14 2016 @ 02:11 PM
link   
www.sciencedaily.com...






The fibula bone (orange) in Dinosaurs is as long as the tibia and reaches down to the ankle (upper left), whereas in adult birds, it is splinter-like and shorter than the tibia, missing its lower end (upper right). However, bird embryos actually start out like dinosaurs, and then develop their adult anatomy (centre). The transformation can be stopped by experimental inhibition of Indian Hedgehog (IHH), a bone maturation gene, which leads to a bird with a dinosaur-like fibula (lower right).
Credit: Image courtesy of Universidad de Chile

Any one that has eaten roasted chicken can account for the presence in the drumstick (lower leg) of a long, spine-like bone. This is actually the fibula, one of the two long bones of the lower leg (the outer one). In dinosaurs, which are the ancestors of birds, this bone is tube-shaped and reaches all the way down to the ankle. However, in the evolution from dinosaurs to birds, it lost its lower end, and no longer connects to the ankle, being shorter than the other bone in the lower leg, the tibia. In the 19th century, scientists had already noted that bird embryos first develop a tubular, dinosaur-like fibula. Only afterwards, it becomes shorter than the tibia and acquires its adult, splinter-like shape.

Brazilian researcher Joâo Botelho, working at the lab of Alexander Vargas (University of Chile) decided to study the mechanisms that underlie this transformation. In normal bone development, the shaft matures and ceases growth (cell division) long before the ends do. Botelho found that molecular mechanisms of maturation were active very early at the lower end, ceasing cell division and growth. When a maturation gene called Indian Hedgehog was inhibited, this resulted in chickens that kept a tubular fibula as long as the tibia and connected to the ankle, just like a dinosaur.

Botelho and collaborators believe that early maturation at the lower end of the fibula occurs because of the influence of a nearby bone in the ankle, the calcaneum. Unlike other animals, the calcaneum in bird embryos presses against the lower end of the fibula: They are so close they have even been confused with a single element by some researchers. Botelho proposes that at this stage, the lower end of the fibula receives signals more like those at the bone shaft. In normal development, the calcaneum then becomes detached from the fibula. However, its distal end has already become committed to shaft-like development, and matures early. In the chickens with experimentally dinosaur-like lower legs, the calcaneum was still attached to the fibula. Botelho also confirmed the calcaneum strongly expresses PthrP, a gene that allows growth at the ends of bones.

Another interesting observation in the experimental chickens was that the other bone of the lower leg, the tibia, was significantly shorter. This suggests that a dinosaur-like fibula connected to the ankle stops the tibia from outgrowing the fibula, as it would normally do. Working with Jingmai O'Connor (IVPP, China), the research team realized this was consistent with an evolutionary pattern documented by the fossil record. The earliest forms to evolve reduced fibulas were toothed birds from the early cretaceous age, which lived alongside dinosaurs. These forms had splinter-like fibulas that did not connect to the ankle, but were almost as long as the tibia. The fibula first lost its lower end in evolution. This may have allowed the evolution of tibias that are much longer than the fibula, which occurred afterwards.

The results of the entire study have been published this week in the journal Evolution. This is the second time Botelho has achieved an experimental reversal to a dinosaur-like trait in birds. Previously, he had managed to undo the evolution of the perching toe of birds, to produce a non-twisted, non-opposed toe, as in dinosaursand another lab at Yale obtained a dinosaur-like snout by altering gene expression in embryonic chickens. However, these studies are not aimed to producing dinosaurs for commercial or non-scientific purposes, as in the "Jurassic Park" movie series.

"The experiments are focused on single traits, to test specific hypotheses" says Vargas. "Not only do we know a great deal about bird development, but also about the dinosaur-bird transition, which is well-documented by the fossil record. This leads naturally to hypotheses on the evolution of development, that can be explored in the lab."


Interesting stuff. I love seeing that they are having some success with the Dinosaur to chicken reverse engineering. Just another thing to add on top of the mountain of evidence for evolution.
edit on 3 14 16 by Barcs because: (no reason given)



posted on Mar, 14 2016 @ 02:17 PM
link   
Already posted here.



posted on Mar, 14 2016 @ 02:27 PM
link   
a reply to: Barcs

Yeah, I read this on Graham Hancock. I wonder if Col. Sanders has dibs on the patent?

This kind of thing makes me nervous in regards unknown side effects of human meddling.

I guess most of us will be around to see how this crazy tree fruits.



posted on Mar, 14 2016 @ 02:36 PM
link   
a reply to: Barcs

It will be like Fred on the Flintstones eating a drumstick.



posted on Mar, 14 2016 @ 03:00 PM
link   

originally posted by: AdmireTheDistance
Already posted here.


Woops, I knew I should have checked in that section first. Apologies!



posted on May, 2 2016 @ 06:45 PM
link   
Very cool thanks OP.



posted on May, 2 2016 @ 07:30 PM
link   
Just one question.
Why?



posted on May, 3 2016 @ 10:47 AM
link   

originally posted by: Cynic
Just one question.
Why?


Knowledge is power. The more we learn about genetics and evolution, the more likely we can apply it in our daily lives or use the knowledge in medicine/organ growing for transplants.



posted on May, 3 2016 @ 01:10 PM
link   
That's not evolution! It's still a chicken! Even the same kind of chicken. If evolution is true the chicken should turn into a fluffy kitten! Evolution is a lie!!!
Whaaaaaaaaaaaa!!



posted on May, 3 2016 @ 04:09 PM
link   

originally posted by: flyingfish
That's not evolution! It's still a chicken! Even the same kind of chicken. If evolution is true the chicken should turn into a fluffy kitten! Evolution is a lie!!!
Whaaaaaaaaaaaa!!


theatrics aside, hybridization is not evolution. evolution is measured by population, not individuals. and the reason they reproduced a leg is because they are damned lucky they were able to successfully recreate reptilian flesh using largely chicken dna.
edit on 3-5-2016 by TzarChasm because: (no reason given)



posted on May, 3 2016 @ 05:27 PM
link   
a reply to: TzarChasm
Yep, however a chicken with recessed dino genes does show evolution at play.



new topics

top topics



 
3

log in

join