Mystery solved: Where the penis comes from
It’s not a question a lot of scientists ponder out loud, but
it’s key to much of life on Earth: Exactly how does the penis form?
Today, two teams of researchers report having solved one part of this
mystery, pinpointing how the organ gets its start in snake, lizard, mouse, and
chick embryos.
Now that they understand the penis’s origin, researchers can
track its development in more detail to understand what drives it to follow a
different path in females and become a clitoris.
The finding doesn’t just
answer a biological conundrum; it could also help millions of people born with
genital malformations.
In
the first study, Harvard University developmental biologists Cliff Tabin,
Patrick Tschopp, and colleagues traced penis development in mouse, lizard,
chick, and snake embryos.
They also analyzed the gene regulatory networks that
orchestrate this process.
They pinpointed the cells destined to become the
penis, but those cells differed depending on the species studied,
they report online today in Nature.
In snakes and lizards, the penis arises from what will become—or, in snakes,
would have been—the beginnings of the back legs, whereas in mice, some of the
cells destined to become the tail take on that task.
Penis formation in the
chicken involved cells from the would-be tail and the would-be hindlimb, the
team reports.
What
was common to all of these animals was the role of the cloaca, a cavity
destined to become the lower part of the gut.
Signals from the cloaca initiate
penis formation in each animal. But as in real estate, location is everything.
The rodent cloaca is back by the tail-to-be and taps some nearby cells for the
penis, whereas the snake cloaca is close to where two limbs used to sprout.
Hence, the snake gets two penises instead of just one, (though it uses just one
at a time during mating), Tschopp says.
When the researchers attached cloacal
tissue to other parts of the chick embryo, they saw the buds indicative of
penis growth where they should not have otherwise formed.
They did not let the
chick develop beyond this point. “Wherever you put the cloaca, that
determines what cell types you recruit,” Tschopp explains.
The work “highlights
the important role of the cloaca in the earliest events involved, which I think
has been underappreciated,” adds Marty Cohn, a developmental biologist at the
University of Florida (UF) in Gainesville, who performed a separate study.
In
that work, he and UF colleague Ana Herrera tagged different cells of a chick
embryo with a fluorescent marker and followed those cells as they proliferated.
They discovered that the ones that turned into either a penis or a clitoris
started out as two groups of cells on opposite edges of the embryo when it was
still a flat sheet.
As that sheet curls up and joins to close the body wall and
make a 3D embryo, the two sets of cells meet in the middle, the
duo reports today in Scientific
Reports.
Each group of cells forms a bud, and these two buds merge
in the chick to form a single penis. In snakes, the buds may remain separate to
form their dual penises.
In people, defects in the genital organs may arise
when the body wall doesn’t close properly, Cohn says.
The
two groups agree that the cells that form the penis start out at the outer edge
of the embryo and that they are closer to the tail in the mouse and chicken
than in the snake.
But they don’t agree on whether those first cells are part
of the pool of cells destined to become a limb or tail or whether the cells
belong to a separate, nearby pool that is already specialized to become the
penis. “I think they are adjacent populations,” Cohn says.
Regardless
of this difference of opinion, these new insights into how the penis gets
started in the embryo are impressive, says Gunter Wagner, an evolutionary
biologist at Yale University who was not involved with either study. “It’s
seems like a pretty complete story to me.”
For him, the work begins to address
the question of how novel anatomical structures arise in evolution.
And in that
respect, he adds, “it’s a big advance.”
Original post: Mystery Solved - Where Penis Comes From
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