Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Space Travel News .




EARLY EARTH
Researchers find our inner reptile hearts
by Camilla Holst Nissen Toftdal
Copenhagen, Denmark (SPX) Sep 19, 2012


The lizard has a heart that is virtually indistinguishable from a human embryonic heart. The reptile has spongy cardiac tissue in which zoophysiologists have now found the evolutionary forerunner of the conductive tissue that makes our hearts so efficient. A century-old mystery has thereby finally been unravelled about the evolution of the human heart. Photo: Bjarke Jensen.

An elaborate system of leads spreads across our hearts. These leads - the heart's electrical system - control our pulse and coordinate contraction of the heart chambers. While the structure of the human heart has been known for a long time, the evolutionary origin of our conduction system has nevertheless remained a mystery.

Researchers have finally succeeded in showing that the spongy tissue in reptile hearts is the forerunner of the complex hearts of both birds and mammals.

The new knowledge provides a deeper understanding of the complex conductive tissue of the human heart, which is of key importance in many heart conditions.

Forerunner of conductive tissue
"The heart of a bird or a mammal - for example a human - pumps frequently and rapidly. This is only possible because it has electrically conductive tissue that controls the heart.

"Until now, however, we haven't been able to find conductive tissue in our common reptilian ancestors, which means we haven't been able to understand how this enormously important system emerged," says Bjarke Jensen, Department of Bioscience, Aarhus University.

Along with Danish colleagues and colleagues from the University of Amsterdam, he can now reveal that the genetic building blocks for highly developed conductive tissue are actually hidden behind the thin wall in the spongy hearts of reptiles. The new results have just been published in the journal PLoS ONE.

Different anatomy conceals similarity
"We studied the hearts of cold-blooded animals like lizards, frogs and zebrafish, and we investigated the gene that determines which parts of the heart are responsible for conducting the activating current.

"By comparing adult hearts from reptiles with embryonic hearts from birds and mammals, we discovered a common molecular structure that's hidden by the anatomical differences," explains Dr Jensen.

Since the early 1900s, scientists have been wondering how birds and mammals could have developed almost identical conduction systems independently of each other when their common ancestor was a cold-blooded reptile with a sponge-like inner heart that has virtually no conduction bundles.

Human foetal hearts
The studies show that it is simply the spongy inner tissue in the foetal heart that gets stretched out to become a fine network of conductive tissue in adult birds and mammals. And this knowledge can be put to use in the future.

"Our knowledge about the reptilian heart and the evolutionary background to our conductive tissue can provide us with a better understanding of how the heart works in the early months of foetal life in humans, when many women miscarry, and where

Identifying the evolutionary building blocks of the cardiac conduction system in PLoS ONE.

.


Related Links
Aarhus University Nordre Ringgade
Explore The Early Earth at TerraDaily.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








EARLY EARTH
Ancient, bottom-dwelling critter proves: Newer isn't always better
Buffalo NY (SPX) Sep 12, 2012
Tiny sea creatures called rhabdopleurids reside on the ocean floor, building homes of collagen on the shells of dead clams. Rhabdopleurid colonies are small, and the critters are by no means the dominant animals in their ecosystem. But they have lived this way - and survived - for more than 500 million years. And in doing so, they have outlasted more elaborate species that also descended from a ... read more


EARLY EARTH
Failure Review Oversight Board Establishes Proton Return to Flight Schedule

HISPASAT chooses Arianespace to launch its Amazonas 4A and AG1 satellites

Arianespace signs multi-launch services agreement with SKY Perfect JSAT of Japan

Vandenberg's Fifth Atlas V lifts off

EARLY EARTH
Mars rover to launch first rock study

NASA Mars Rover Opportunity Reveals Geological Mystery

Opportunity Begins Examining Clay Minerals

Squyres Warns Congress of Threats to Mars Program

EARLY EARTH
Russia to start research base on the Moon

Remains of astronaut legend Neil Armstrong buried at sea

Memorial service honors 'man on the moon' Armstrong

Chandrayaan II may be delayed, says ISRO Chief

EARLY EARTH
The Kuiper Belt at 20: Paradigm Changes in Our Knowledge of the Solar System

e2v To Supply Large CMOS Imaging Sensors For Imaging Kuiper Belt Objects

Fly New Horizons through the Kuiper Belt

Hubble Discovers a Fifth Moon Orbiting Pluto

EARLY EARTH
Meteors Might Add Methane to Exoplanet Atmospheres

Two 'hot Jupiters' found in star cluster: NASA

Planets Can Form in the Galactic Center

Birth of a planet

EARLY EARTH
Space formula of Konstantin Tsiolkovsky

XCOR Announces FiberDyne as Lynx Mark I Wing Strake Manufacturer

NASA's Space Launch System Celebrates a Year of Powering Forward

A Canopy of Confidence: Orion's Parachutes

EARLY EARTH
Tiangong Orbit Change Signals Likely Date for Shenzhou 10

China Focus: Timeline for China's space research revealed

China eyes next lunar landing as US scales back

China unveils ambitious space projects

EARLY EARTH
Vesta in Dawn's Rear View Mirror

Dawn has Departed the Giant Asteroid Vesta

US space probe leaves asteroid's orbit, NASA says

Dawn Of A New Mission To Proto Planet Ceres




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement