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【关于软体动物壳的形成】

魏思远 发表于2019年09月25日
<p>老师好,软体动物这个壳或者螺的形成很有意思呀,如果按照课程中介绍的形成方式,那么螺壳的左旋和右旋应该是随机出现的才对呀,为什么现在右旋占大多数呢?而为何在集中的几个科里又会多见左旋呢?不知道是否有关于这方面的研究?谢谢老师。</p>
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  • 张雁云 发表于2019年09月25日
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    <p>M. Abe and R. Kuroda.&nbsp;The development of CRISPR for a mollusk establishes the formin Lsdia1 as the long-sought gene for snail dextral/sinistral coiling.&nbsp;Development,2019&nbsp;146:&nbsp;dev175976.&nbsp;&nbsp;doi:&nbsp;10.1242/dev.175976<br ></p><p><br ></p><p><strong>How the snail's shell got its coil&nbsp;&nbsp;</strong></p><p><strong><a href="https://phys.org/news/2019-05-snail-shell.html" >https://phys.org/news/2019-05-snail-shell.html</a> </strong></p><p><img src="https://nos.netease.com/edu-image/0d5d92214c384a178cc4e4e5bde7b705.jpg" /></p><p>If you look at a snail's shell, the chances are it will coil to the right. But, occasionally, you might find an unlucky one that twists in the opposite direction—as fans of Jeremy thelefty snail will remember, these snails struggle to mate with the more common rightward-coiling individuals.</p><p><br /></p><p>This chirality (direction of coiling) of&nbsp;snail shells&nbsp;is an outward manifestation of left-right asymmetry: a phenomenon seen across&nbsp;animal evolution&nbsp;and extending to humans—your heart is (probably) on your left side, while your liver is to the right. But how does thisasymmetry come about? Researchers from Japan, writing in the journal&nbsp;Development, think they now have a definitive answer—for one species of freshwater snail (Lymnaea stagnalis) at least.</p><p>Successfully applying CRISPR gene editing technology to molluscs for the first time, Masanori Abe and Reiko Kuroda (working at Tokyo University of Science, but recentlyrelocated to Chubu University, Japan), have now made snails with mutations in a gene called Lsdia1, which had previously been suggested—but not conclusively proven—to be involved in snail&nbsp;shell&nbsp;coiling; snails without a functional copy of Lsdia1 produce offspring with shells that coil to the left, showing that this&nbsp;single gene&nbsp;is responsible for rightwardcoiling. Surprisingly, the researchers could see signs of asymmetry at the earliest possiblestage of development—when the snail embryo was just a single cell. Moreover, the mutant snails could be reared to adults, when they produced exclusively leftward-coilingoffspring. According to Kuroda: &quot;It is remarkable that these snails with reversed coiling are healthy and fertile, and that this coiling can be inherited generation after generation(we now have 5th-generation leftward-coiling snails). Further, these results may have an implication for snail evolution and speciation—given that left- and rightward-coiling snails probably wouldn't interbreed.&quot;</p><p>It's still not clear how Lsdia1 might control left-right asymmetry: the gene encodes a formin, a protein that is involved in regulating the cell's internal skeleton, but more work is needed to understand how this influences the cellular behaviours that control handedness—which is something Kuroda and her colleagues are actively working on. But given that&nbsp;genes&nbsp;like Lsdia1 are found throughout the animal kingdom, similar mechanisms for controlling left-right asymmetry could be at play in other species—including our own.</p><p>As Kuroda says: &quot;Although diverse mechanisms have been proposed for different animals, we think a unified mechanism, involving formins and cellular chirality, is probable&quot;. So while it may seem a big leap from snail shell coiling to human left-right asymmetries, it's possible that future studies on how Lsdia1 works in snails might eventually help us understand why some babies are born with their heart on the right (which is of course thewrong) side of their chest.</p><p><br /></p>
    张雁云 发表于2019年09月25日
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