Octopus Genome Sequenced
An anonymous reader writes: A large, international team of researchers has completed the full sequencing of the octopus genome. "The researchers discovered striking differences between the genomes of the octopus and other invertebrates, including widespread rearrangements of genes and a dramatic expansion of a family of genes involved in neuronal development that was once thought to be unique to vertebrates." Among other things, the data allows scientists to more deeply analyze the creature's unique nervous system. "The central brain surrounds the esophagus, which is typical of invertebrates, but it also has groups of neurons in the arms that can work relatively autonomously, plus huge optic lobes involved in vision." Their study has been published in Nature.
Fiddlesticks! If I had 8 legs I'd have got me a frost pots.
What's the correct plural of octopus, by the way? [gets out popcorn]
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
An octopus developed it's high intelligence as a by product of learning how to use so many arms. But simply because it was more efficient to put the neurons in the arms, it makes it harder to steal those neurons to use for other purposes and allow those arms to vesitgilize, the way homonids vestigialized our jaw muscles, freeing up the skull for brains rather than muscles and bone.
excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
Specifically, TFA discusses the sequencing of the genome of the two-spot octopus (Octopus bimaculoides).
Do octopus chromosomes come in octets?
Sharktopus!
Will this lead to the ability for me to do gene therapy to enable me to camouflage on a whim?
I can't wait until we can play with a genome and build the results.
Is that doable yet? I don't know..
CSI South Pacific:
A sea crab was murdered today. Round up all the octopuses.Let's get to the bottom of this.
With lasers, and maybe a plunger!
We'll build the octopus of your dreams!
When they did this, were they able to sort out which octopodes were expressing extreme fatherly tendencies, combined with elaborate camouflage meant to disguise the number of limbs?
Can the scientists help these particular specimens walk with a more natural gait without getting tentacles stuck to everything?
Defending IP by destroying access to it? That makes sense, RIAA/MPAA. Go to the corner until you can play nice!
Just asking...
While for the most part Genes of the same species are the same, some form "individual" combination.
In case of an octopus, how do we know, which parts are common, and which reflect poor beast's "personality"?
Octopus is one thing that I used to eat all the time that I've cut out of my diet because of how smart they are.