Advertisement

Science Friday
From three to four chambers
Scientists identify gene that may shape the heart
font_down font_up Text Size
access
Taking heart in two ventriclesNew molecular details suggest that the red-eared slider turtle heart has two ventricles, seen in this three-dimensional reconstruction of a turtle heart (left). The heart chambers develop while the turtle is an embryo (right).Heart: Bogac Kaynak and Benoit Bruneau. Embryo: Judy Cebra-Thomas and Scott Gilbert.

Lizards and turtles are not warm and cuddly, but they do have hearts — and interesting ones, at that. One molecular difference in reptile hearts may have divided single ventricles into two, creating four-chambered hearts from three-chambered ones as species evolved, a study published in the Sept. 3 Nature finds.

“The major question has been, what drove the evolution of the four-chambered heart?” comments James Hicks, an evolutionary biologist at the University of California, Irvine. Results from the new study “could lead to a deeper understanding of the fundamental factors involved in heart development,” he says.

Amphibians have three-chambered hearts made up of two top chambers, atria, and one bottom chamber, the ventricle. Mammals and birds have two atria and two ventricles, with ventricles separated by a muscular ridge called a septum.

Reptile hearts, on the other hand, have long been a mystery, says study coauthor Benoit Bruneau of the Gladstone Institute of Cardiovascular Disease in San Francisco. Lizard and turtle hearts appear to be intermediate forms, with two atria and a semiseparated ventricle, Bruneau says. Muscular ridges lie in the middle of the ventricular region, but the anatomy didn’t reveal whether they were true septa or not. With the new study, “We wanted to lay that uncertainty to rest,” Bruneau says.

access
Heart comparisonsA new study may help solve a long-standing mystery of reptilian heart development and evolution by revealing that a turtle heart (left) has two ventricles, but a lizard heart (right) has just one.Bogac Kaynak and Benoit Bruneau.

Researchers already knew that in mammals and birds, a gene called TBX5 was active during development on the left side of the heart where the left ventricle forms, but not on the right side.

Bruneau and his colleagues looked for TBX5 gene activity in the developing hearts of red-eared slider turtles and green anole lizards to see if the segregated pattern of TBX5 was present in reptiles. Early in development, TBX5 was active throughout the entire ventricle region in both turtle and lizard hearts. But later in development, TBX5 activity had disappeared from the right side of the turtle heart, remaining only in the left side. Such separation suggested that the turtle does indeed have two ventricles, Bruneau says. In the lizard heart, TBX5 had no separation; the even spread of TBX5 suggested a single ventricle.

“We were able to conclusively say that the large structure found in lizards is not a septum,” Bruneau says. Lizards are thought to have evolved earlier than turtles, the authors write, suggesting that TBX5’s left-right segregation, and the ensuing ventricle separation, evolved later.

But just because the TBX5 pattern correlated with septum formation — or lack thereof — doesn’t mean that TBX5 was actually causing ventricle separation. “We didn’t know how important the TBX5 pattern was,” Bruneau says.

So the researchers manipulated the pattern of TBX5 in developing mice hearts. When researchers shifted levels of the gene’s expression, the mice hearts failed to form two ventricles. Likewise, when TBX5 was expressed everywhere throughout the ventricle region, similar to what happens in the lizard heart, the mice hearts failed to form two ventricles.

“We found that the activity of TBX5 is really important for septation,” Bruneau says. “I’ve always wondered about the evolution of the heart. Being able to pinpoint an important regulator of the heart is exciting.”

A four-chambered heart with two distinct ventricular chambers allows the heart to produce two different blood pressures: low pressure for blood pumped to the lungs and high pressure for the oxygen-rich blood pumped out to the rest of the body. This dual pressure system is a key requirement for an animal to be warm-blooded, Hicks says, which is “an important trick to have.” Animals that are warm-blooded may have higher growth rates, niche expansion and greater competitiveness in an environment, he says. “Now that the tools are there, we can now look at a whole variety of reptiles,” Hicks says.

Not only does the new study shed light on the evolution of the four-chambered heart, but it also may lead to a greater understanding of congenital heart diseases, some of which are known to be caused by TBX5 mutations. “A big reason we were interested in TBX5 is that it is related to human heart diseases,” Bruneau says.


Found in: Body & Brain, Genes & Cells and Life
Comments 9
  • Something else which may be of interest - from 2006...

    Changing the expression of a single protein leads to the recruitment of tail muscle cells by the heart in Ciona intestinalis -- and the formation of a functional two-chamber heart from what is normally a one-chamber heart:

    "Targeted inhibition of Ets1/2 activity or FGF receptor function also blocks heart specification. Conversely, application of FGF or targeted expression of constitutively active Ets1/2 (EtsVp16) cause both rostral and caudal B7.5 lineages to form heart cells. This expansion produces an unexpected phenotype: transformation of a single-compartment heart into a functional multicompartment organ. We discuss these results with regard to the development and evolution of the multichambered vertebrate heart."

    Brad Davidson et al (2006) FGF signaling delineates the cardiac progenitor field in the simple chordate, Ciona intestinalis, Genes & Dev. 20: 2728-2738
    [Link was removed]
    Timothy Chase Timothy Chase
    Sep. 21, 2009 at 9:16pm
  • The dual pressure system is a key requirement for an animal to be warm-blooded which is an important trick to have.
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]

    ronna chinu ronna chinu
    Dec. 16, 2009 at 1:16pm
  • Nice report, [Link was removed] [Link was removed] I like it, very useful with my recent study now.
    Thank you. [Link was removed] [Link was removed]
    Misafir Misafir Misafir Misafir
    Dec. 19, 2009 at 12:37pm
  • I didn't see another possible source for the oxidation of iron in ancient seas - UV dissociation of water in the atmosphere. This is a process that supposedly robs Mars of it's atmospheric water. Is it a possibility here too? Before there was significant oxygen in the atmosphere, there would be no ozone layer to prevent UV light from reaching the surface.
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed] and [Link was removed]
    webalem net webalem net
    Dec. 19, 2009 at 3:01pm
  • Genetic disorders are often caused by sperm DNA that has double strand breaks, copy number variations, point mutations and imprinting mutations that have to do with advancing paternal age. Men need to know about their biological clock and father babies in their 20s and very early



    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    iSo AsTaLaViSTa iSo AsTaLaViSTa
    Dec. 26, 2009 at 10:26pm
  • [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    webalem net webalem net
    Dec. 28, 2009 at 5:11am

  • [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    m9bnat m9bnat2 m9bnat m9bnat2
    Jan. 9, 2010 at 4:38pm
  • Thank you administrator...
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    [Link was removed]
    Science News Science News
    Jan. 14, 2010 at 8:00pm
  • sanalgucluler.com
    ceyhan özcan ceyhan özcan
    Jan. 21, 2010 at 5:08pm
Post a comment (Please note: All links will be removed from comments.)

Please login or register to participate.


Advertisement
Suggested Reading:
seperator
  • Milius, S. 2009. Turtles make sense after all: Evolutionary development study describes a critical fold that sends the reptile off on its own. 176(August 1): 5. [Go to]
Citations & References:
seperator
  • Koshiba-Takeuchi, K. et al. Reptilian heart development and the molecular basis of cardiac chamber evolution. Nature, 461(September 3): 95-98.
    doi:10.1038/nature08324
Reader Favorites:
seperator
SN on the Web:
seperator