Origin and stepwise improvement of vertebrate lungs

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Abstract

Lungs, essential for terrestrial vertebrates and present in bony fishes but absent in cartilaginous fishes, provide an ideal model for studying organ origination. Our study analyzed single-cell RNA sequencing data from mature and developing vertebrate lungs, revealing substantial similarities in cell composition, developmental trajectories and gene expression pattern across species. Notably, most lung-related genes are also present in cartilaginous fishes, indicating that gene presence alone does not guarantee lung development. We identified thousands of lung regulatory elements specific to bony fishes, with higher concentrations around genes such as tbx4 and the hoxb gene cluster. These regulatory changes might contribute to lung emergence as well as the unique co-expression patterns in lung epithelial cells, such as those related to pulmonary surfactants and cell morphology. Our research also revealed that AT1 cells are specific to mammals, and we identified a mammal-specific gene, sfta2. Knockout experiments demonstrated that sfta2 deletion causes severe respiratory defects in mice, underscoring its critical role in specialized mammalian lungs. In conclusion, our results demonstrate that the origin and evolution of lungs are driven by a complex interplay of regulatory network modifications and the emergence of new genes, underscoring the multifaceted nature of organ evolution.

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