New work led by developmental biologist Moises Mallo of the Gulbenkian Institute of Science in Oeiras, Portugal and published in Developmental Cell has used a special mutant mouse to delve deeper into questions junk DNA has inspired. That mouse had grown 24 sets of ribs instead of the typical 13. It was noted that, like snakes, those ribs extended all the way down the backbone to the hind legs.
It was determined that the mice carried a mutation in a gene called GDF11. That gene functions as a brake on another gene – OCT4. Without GDF11 present, there was nothing to reduce the activity of OCT4, so the mice developed extra vertebrae and ribs.
Other investigators would like to see additional confirmation of these findings in other ways before drawing definitive conclusions. Snakes however, will probably not be genetically engineered anytime soon to see if the opposite effect could be produced. There is currently no method that accesses snake embryos, so they cannot be genetically engineered.
Developmental biologist Michael Richardson of Leiden University, who is also a snake specialist, suggests OCT4 may be another indication that evolution uses noncoding DNA to alter anatomy. “We know that often times it’s not the gene itself that changed - it’s the flanking regions or the regulatory regions,” Richardson told Science News. “What they’ve shown quite clearly here is that the OCT4 gene isn’t different but the timing [of its expression] is prolonged.”
Sources: Science News, Developmental Cell