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August 6, 2010

Sponge genome project on redOrbit

“Though we think of a sponge as a simple creature whose skeleton we take to the bathtub, it has a lot of the major biochemical and developmental pathways we associate with complex functions in humans and other more complex animals,” she said. “But there are certain missing components. Future studies will reveal how sponges operate as bona fide animals without those components, and how the addition of those components led to the evolution of more complex animals.”
Read more on redOrbit.

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Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Australia, Bernard Degnan, Dan Rokhsar, UC Berkeley

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