People with tails? No, because of this ancient genetic mutation
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[February 29, 2024]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Director James Cameron's "Avatar" movies are
populated by a species of outsized blue beings resembling humans, except
with tails. So why does our species lack a tail, considering that our
evolutionary forerunners in the primate lineage had them?
Scientists on Wednesday identified what might be the genetic mechanism
behind the tailless condition of us and our ape ancestors - a mutation
in a gene instrumental in embryonic development. The tail was a feature
of most vertebrates for more than half a billion years, and its loss may
have offered advantages as our ancestors moved from the trees to the
ground, they said.
The researchers compared the DNA of two groups of primates: monkeys,
which have tails, and hominoids - humans and apes - which do not. They
found a mutation in a gene called TBXT that was present in people and
apes but absent in monkeys. To test the effects of this mutation, the
researchers genetically modified laboratory mice to have this trait.
These mice ended up with either a reduced tail or none at all.
"For the first time, we propose a plausible scenario for the genetic
mechanism that led to the loss of the tail in our ancestors. It's
surprising that such a big anatomical change can be caused by such a
small genetic change," said New York University Langone Health
geneticist and systems biologist Itai Yanai, who helped lead the study
published in the journal Nature.
The absence of a tail may have better balanced the body for orthograde -
upright - locomotion and eventually bipedalism, said geneticist and
systems biologist Bo Xia of Harvard University and the Broad Institute,
the study's lead author.
The mutation that led to tail loss, according to the researchers,
occurred roughly 25 million years ago, when the first apes evolved from
monkey ancestors. Our species, Homo sapiens, appeared roughly 300,000
years ago.
The evolutionary lineage that led to apes and people split from the
lineage that led to today's Old World monkeys, a family that includes
baboons and macaques. Hominoids today include humans, the "great apes" -
chimpanzees, bonobos, gorillas, orangutans - and the "lesser apes" -
gibbons. The earliest-known hominoid, called Proconsul, was tailless.
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A baby mountain gorilla rides on her mother's back on the slopes of
Mount Mikeno in the Virunga National Park, Eastern DRC December 12,
2008. REUTERS/Peter Andrews/File Photo
Hominoids evolved the formation of fewer tail vertebrae, losing an
external tail. Vestiges of a tail remain in humans. A bone at the
base of the spinal column called the coccyx, or tailbone, is formed
from fused remnants of tail vertebrae.
For many vertebrates, a tail has helped with functions like
locomotion - think of propulsion by fish and whales - and defense -
as with dinosaurs that wielded tails with clubs or spikes. Some
monkeys and some other animals have prehensile tails that can grasp
objects like tree limbs.
"A tail may be advantageous when you live in trees. As soon as you
transition to land, though, it may be more of a liability," Yanai
said.
The advantages obtained by going tailless appear to have come with a
cost. Because genes may contribute to multiple functions in the
body, mutations that confer an advantage in one area may be
detrimental in another.
In this case, the modified mice showed a small increase in severe
birth defects, called neural tube defects, of the spinal cord,
resembling spina bifida in people.
"This suggests that the evolutionary pressure to lose the tail was
so great that, despite creating the potential for this condition
(neural tube defects), we still lost the tail," Yanai said.
It is an interesting thought experiment to ponder whether humans
could have evolved with tails. The Na'vi people of "Avatar," alas,
are science fiction.
"I'm a fan of James Cameron's 'Avatar' - it's just a beautiful
world, and the Na'vi people use their tails for direct
communication," Xia said. "I hope to ask James why he created Na'vi
people with tails."
(Reporting by Will Dunham, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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