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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
Science
Vishwam Sankaran

Scientists may have finally cracked puzzle of what came first: chicken or egg

A fossilised prehistoric organism discovered in 2017 has led scientists to conclude that eggs emerged long before the first animals evolved, implying that they came before chicken.

Chromosphaera perkinsii, a unicellular organism found in Hawaii, first appeared at least one billion years ago and underwent cell division to produce what resembled a precursor to eggs.

Scientists from the University of Geneva found that this organism formed multicellular structures bearing striking similarities to animal embryos.

The findings, published in the journal Nature, indicate that eggs existed long before the appearance of the first animals.

“Though Chromosphaera perkinsii is a unicellular species, this behaviour shows that multicellular coordination and differentiation processes are already present in the species, well before the first animals appeared on Earth,” study lead author Omaya Dudin said.

Multicellular development of Chromosphaera perkinsii (O Dudin)

Single-cell life forms like yeast or some bacteria appeared on the planet long before multicellular organisms like animals, which developed from a single egg cell into complex beings.

This embryo development process followed very particular stages known to be remarkably similar between animal species.

Researchers suspected that the process evolved much earlier, dating back to a period well before the appearance of animals.

But exactly how this transition from unicellular species to multicellular organisms occurred was still very poorly understood.

In the new study, scientists assessed the ancestral life form C perkinsii, which separated from the animal evolutionary line over a billion years ago, and found key insights into the mechanisms behind the transition into multicellular life forms.

They found that once C perkinsii reached their maximum size, they divided without growing any further and formed multicellular colonies resembling the early stages of animal embryos.

The colonies, comprising at least two distinct cell types, persisted for around a third of their life cycle, a phenomenon researchers deemed “surprising” for this type of organism.

The way these colonies divided with a distinct three-dimensional structure was “strikingly reminiscent” of the early steps involved in embryonic development in animals, they said.

Based on this discovery, researchers said the genetic tools needed to “create eggs” existed long before nature “invented chickens” over a billion years ago.

There was a possibility though that the mechanisms behind multicellular development could have evolved separately in C perkinsii, and researchers said they hoped further studies of the organism would reveal which was the likelier case.

“It’s fascinating, a species discovered very recently allows us to go back in time more than a billion years,” Marine Olivetta, another author of the study, said.

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