Periodic Reporting for period 3 - ParadOX (The hardships for life to become big – rethinking hypoxia as an evolutionary driver for the rise of complex multicellularity)
Período documentado: 2024-01-01 hasta 2025-06-30
In the ParadOX project, I and a transdisciplinary team explore the role of innovations that harness hypoxia and the processes that led to these innovations. The overall objective is to explore the role of hypoxia for the evolution of multicellularity and to what extent oxygen-sensing mechanisms play a part.
• A comparison how aspects of their oxygen-sensing mechanisms are shared between animals, fungi, and plants. Their mechanisms are functionally convergent.
• Modeling of how daily oxygen fluctuations would affect living conditions at the sediment-water interface on an expanding shallow shelf setting in the Cambrian Period and affect animals with poor versus good oxygen-sensing mechanisms. The work demonstrates that animals on the shallow Cambrian shelf would have been challenged by daily shifts from oxic (in the day) to anoxic (at night), even when testing over a broad parameter space.
• We have also showed that chick embryo development requires an initial phase of hypoxia within the eggshell. It is the exponential growth of the embryo earliest stages that overpowers the influx of oxygen through the eggshell.
• We have geochemically analyzed a drillcore from the Silurian and interpret that for most part of the 15 million years that it spans. We here also discuss how the term hypoxia have different meanings in different academic disciplines.