Lab publishes PNAS study about the evolution of gill covers

Zebrafish gill covers
A live adult zebrafish showing showing Pou3f3 gene activity (green) in the gill cover, jaw support skeleton, and eye. Bone-forming cells are labeled in magenta. (Image by Peter Fabian/USC Stem Cell)
The emergence of jaws in primitive fish allowed vertebrates to become top predators. What is less appreciated is another evolutionary innovation that may have been just as important for the success of early vertebrates: the formation of covers to protect and pump water over the gills. In a new study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of the Sciences (PNAS), USC Stem Cell scientists and their collaborators have identified a key modification to the genome that led to the evolution of gill covers more than 430 million years ago.

To read more, visit https://stemcell.keck.usc.edu/usc-led-study-traces-the-evolution-of-gill-covers/.