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Sea Anemones Reveal the 700-Million-Year-Old Code That Builds Our Bodies

Last updated: January 17, 2026 4:39 pm
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Sea Anemones Reveal the 700-Million-Year-Old Code That Builds Our Bodies
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The same molecular courier service that tells your spine where to grow is already at work in brainless anemones, proving the blueprint for bilateral bodies is at least 700 million years old—twice the age of the earliest fossils with left-right symmetry.

The Shock in the Shallows

Sea anemones have no brain, no through-gut, and no obvious front or back—yet they just handed evolutionary biologists a time machine. Researchers at the University of Vienna report that anemones use bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) shuttling, the same gradient-making trick vertebrates rely on to place kidneys, skin, and spinal cords. The discovery, published in Science Advances, pushes the origin of bilateral body plans back to the common ancestor we share with cnidarians—an animal that likely lived 600–700 million years ago, long before the oldest bilateral fossils.

What BMP Shuttling Actually Does

  • Chordin binds BMPs in one tissue and ferries them away, creating a low-BMP zone.
  • Low BMP = nervous system territory.
  • Medium BMP = kidneys and somites.
  • High BMP = belly skin and epidermis.

Vertebrates, flies, and now anemones all deploy this three-step chemical GPS. The surprise is that anemones, radially symmetric members of phylum Cnidaria, build their single oral-aboral axis with the same toolbox.

How the Team Caught the Courier

Using CRISPR knock-outs and fluorescent reporters in Nematostella vectensis—a lab-friendly anemone—David Mörsdorf’s group showed that removing Chordin collapses the BMP gradient. Oral structures balloon, aboral ones shrink, and the animal’s single body axis warps exactly the way frog embryos do when Chordin is deleted. The protein even shuttles between ectoderm layers, recreating the same back-to-belly polarity seen in tadpoles.

Two Explanations, One Bomb

  1. Deep homology: The last common ancestor of cnidarians and bilaterians was already bilateral and used BMP shuttling to pattern itself.
  2. Convergent evolution: Both lineages invented the same complex system independently.

Genikhovich leans toward option one: “If the last common ancestor was a bilaterally symmetric animal, chances are that it used Chordin to shuttle BMPs.” Either way, the molecular machinery is ancient, robust, and reusable—nature’s favorite Lego set.

Why Developers Should Care

BMP gradients are the default template for every organoid, stem-cell protocol, and tissue-engineering scaffold in development today. Knowing the circuit predates vertebrae means:

  • It is extraordinarily stable—evolution has pressure-tested it for 700 million years.
  • Minor tweaks (timing, concentration, inhibitor pulses) are enough to flip ectoderm into brain, skin, or gut lining.
  • Anemone embryos grow fast, are translucent, and tolerate micro-injection—an ideal live assay for next-gen morphogen drugs.

What Comes Next

Teams are already sequencing anemone populations from hypersaline lagoons to see how BMP-pathway mutations survive in extreme pH—data that will feed directly into human gene-therapy vectors that need rock-solid gradient control. Expect anemone CRISPR kits to hit synthetic-biology catalogs within the year, marketed as the cheapest way to screen BMP modulators for osteoporosis and neural-tube defects.

Stay ahead of the curve—bookmark onlytrustedinfo.com for the fastest, lab-grade breakdowns of the discoveries rewriting biology before the ink is dry.

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