We
often think of ourselves -and other animals- as symmetrical because we
have two two eyes, two hands, two legs, etc that are pretty much alike.
But we are not symmetrical. Our hearts are on the left, and our liver is
on the right, except for a tiny minority of people who have those
reversed. And almost all of us have one dominant hand that we use for
skilled tasks. Scientists have been looking back into the evolutionary
line to see when and how animals developed asymmetry, and why one
direction is so dominant in a species. Pond snails were a good species
to study, since their shells spiral either right or left from the time
they begin to grow them.
In 2010, Reiko Kuroda
showed that these asymmetries begin in the snail’s earliest moments.
Like all of us, they begin life as a single cell, which divides into
two, and then into four. At this stage, all the cells are the same size
and shape. But the next division is unequal, pinching off a small cell
on top of a big one—picture four ping pong balls sitting on top of four
tennis balls. The ping pong-sized cells then rotate to nestle between
the furrows of the tennis-sized ones. If they rotate clockwise, the
snails end up with a right-handed shell. When Kuroda nudged them
anticlockwise, using glass rods and exceptional dexterity, she produced
left-handed shells.
Scientists Angus Davison Mark
Blaxter looked further at snail development and found differences in the
very first cell division -and traced the difference in the two cells to
one protein. Manipulating this protein also caused frogs to grow their
hearts on the “wrong” side of their bodies. Read more about
the research into animal asymmetry at the Atlantic.
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