Dinosaur-like snouts grown on chicken embryos - Action News
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Science

Dinosaur-like snouts grown on chicken embryos

Scientists have grown dinosaur-like snouts on chicken embryos, revealing how the bird beak may have evolved.

Scientists block activity of genes turned on during beak development in birds

By making small changes to the way genes are turned on during development, researchers can sometimes induce dinosaur-like traits in the chicken embryos, such as snouts instead of beaks. (Bhart-Anjan Bhullar/Yale University)

Scientists have grown dinosaur-like snouts on chicken embryos, revealing how the bird beak may have evolved.

Birds are thought to have evolved from dinosaurs, but have very different jaws. Bird-like dinosaurs such as the velociraptor have two bones at the tip of their upper jaws. In birds, those bones are fused to form a beak.

By blocking two proteinsthat are activated when chicken embryos grow their beaks, U.S. researchers caused their jaws to "revert" to a velociraptor-like snout. The changes were observed in chick embryos that developed until they were close to hatching.

To their surprise, the birds' palates, on the roof of their mouths, also became dinosaur-like.

"This was unexpected and demonstrates the way in which a single, simple developmental mechanism can have wide-ranging and unexpected effects," said Bhart-Anjan Bhullar, lead author of the study, in a statement from Yale University. The study was co-led byArhat Abzhanov, Bhullar's doctoral supervisor atHarvard University.

The researchers published their results in the journal Evolution.

In order to figure out what might be responsible for beak development, Bhullar and his colleagues compared the activation of genes in birds to that in reptiles such as crocodiles, turtles and lizards as their jaws formed during embryonic development.

They found two proteins that were only activated in birds, and those were the ones they blocked during their experiment.

The result suggeststhe kinds of evolutionary changes that led to the development of the beak. It also helps predict what undiscovered "missing link" species between dinosaurs and birds may have looked like, the researchers said.

It's not the first time chicken embryos have been reverted to produce a dinosaur-like trait in 2006, German scientists identified a genetic mutation that causes chicken embryos to grow teeth.