How fish gills may have turned into human ears

Surprising link between ears and fish gills
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Surprising link between ears and fish gills


Have you ever wondered why our ears look the way they do? That soft, curved shape we rarely think twice about might actually carry a hidden story– one that traces all the way back to life under the sea. And no, this isn’t a sci-fi plot twist. It’s evolutionary biology.


In a fascinating new discovery, scientists have found evidence suggesting that the flexible outer part of human ears may have evolved from the gills of ancient fish. Yes, your ears– the same ones you use for music, phone calls, and awkward silences– might be evolutionary leftovers from a time when our ancestors lived entirely underwater.


The missing link in our ears’ evolution
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The missing link in our ears’ evolution




While researchers have long known that parts of the middle ear originated from fish jawbones, the outer ear has remained more mysterious– until now. “When we started the project, the evolutionary origin of the outer ear was a complete black box,” said Gage Crump, professor of stem cell biology and regenerative medicine at the University of Southern California, as quoted by livescience(dot)com.


His team’s new research, published in Nature on January 9, offers fresh insight into how our outer ears may have gradually formed from older structures, starting with fish gills, as per the livescience(dot)com report.


A clue hidden in cartilage
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A clue hidden in cartilage



What do fish gills and human ears have in common? According to Crump and his team, it’s a special kind of flexible tissue called elastic cartilage– the same stuff that gives our ears their bend and shape. “When we started the study, there was very little out there about whether elastic cartilage existed outside of mammals,” Crump noted.


But the researchers discovered that this exact type of cartilage is present in the gills of modern fish species like zebrafish and Atlantic salmon– a surprising find that raised a bigger question: could our ears and fish gills be connected by more than just chance?

Genes tell the story
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Genes tell the story




As per the report, to explore this further, the team didn’t use fossils, because fossils can’t show soft parts like cartilage. Instead, they studied genetics, especially parts of DNA called enhancers, which control how and where genes are turned on. When they put human ear enhancers into zebrafish, those enhancers became active in the fish’s gills. Then they did the opposite, using fish gill enhancers in mice, and those enhancers turned on in the mice’s outer ears.


This genetic exchange revealed a strong evolutionary connection. As the authors of the study wrote, “Our findings suggest that elements of an ancestral gill developmental program were reutilized multiple times through the course of vertebrate evolution to generate diverse gill and ear structures.”

A deeper dive into evolution
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A deeper dive into evolution




The team also tested amphibians and reptiles, like tadpoles and green anole lizards. According to the report, they found the same kind of gene activity in their ear canals, which suggests this change started over 300 million years ago. Even more surprising? A gene enhancer from horseshoe crabs– sea creatures that have been around for more than 400 million years– also activated genes in zebrafish gills. This points to an even older beginning for this evolutionary link.“This work provides a new chapter to the evolution of the mammalian ear,” Crump said, as quoted by the livescience(dot)com.


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