4.8 Article

Muscle systems and motility of early animals highlighted by cnidarians from the basal Cambrian

Journal

ELIFE
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

eLIFE SCIENCES PUBL LTD
DOI: 10.7554/eLife.74716

Keywords

jellyfish swimming; motility; muscle system; small shelly fossils; basal Cambrian; Other

Categories

Funding

  1. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2020M672013]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41902012, 41876180, 41720104002]
  3. Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDB26000000]
  4. 111 Project of the Ministry of Education of China [D17013, D163107]
  5. State Key Laboratory of Continental Dynamics, Northwest University, China [BJ11060]
  6. Region AuvergneRhone-Alpes
  7. Univ. of Lyon PAI grant
  8. Agence Nationale de la Recherche Lucas Leclere [ANR-19CE13-0003]
  9. Natural Science Foundation of China [41772021, 41911530236]

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Although there is little direct information available on the muscle systems of early animals, this study describes exceptionally preserved muscles in benthic olivooid medusozoans from the basal Cambrian, providing the oldest record of a muscle system in cnidarians. These muscles likely helped early Cambrian jellyfish to develop jet-propelled swimming within the water column.
Although fossil evidence suggests that various animal groups were able to move actively through their environment in the early stages of their evolution, virtually no direct information is available on the nature of their muscle systems. The origin of jellyfish swimming, for example, is of great interest to biologists. Exceptionally preserved muscles are described here in benthic peridermal olivooid medusozoans from the basal Cambrian of China (Kuanchuanpu Formation, ca. 535 Ma) that have direct equivalent in modern medusozoans. They consist of circular fibers distributed over the bell surface (subumbrella) and most probably have a myoepithelial origin. This is the oldest record of a muscle system in cnidarians and more generally in animals. This basic system was probably co-opted by early Cambrian jellyfish to develop capacities for jet-propelled swimming within the water column. Additional lines of fossil evidence obtained from ecdysozoans (worms and panarthropods) show that the muscle systems of early animals underwent a rapid diversification through the early Cambrian and increased their capacity to colonize a wide range of habitats both within the water column and sediment at a critical time of their evolutionary radiation.

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