Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • [INTRO ♪]

  • In the Florida Keys at Ernest Hemingway's old house there's a whole colony of cats with too many toes.

  • The story goes that Hemingway was once gifted a six-toed cat, named Snow White or maybe Snowballthe details are kind of sketchyby an old sea captain.

  • Now, that cat's six-toed descendants roam freely on the estate.

  • This story is so widely circulated that cats with extra toes are often referred to as Hemingway cats.

  • But these felines' fancy feet can also teach us somethingabout the genes that build our bodies, and how they're passed down across generations.

  • The scientific name for too many fingers or toes is polydactyly, which comes from a combination of two Greek words:

  • poly, meaning many, and dactylos, which means digits.

  • It's not just cats who can have too many digits.

  • Polydactyly can affect a variety of vertebrates, like chickens, dogs, guinea pigs and mice.

  • And humans, like that guy who killed Inigo Montoya's father.

  • Although it affects many species, it's still pretty rareeven though much of the time, having six fingers is actually controlled by a dominant allele.

  • An allele, or version of a gene, is dominant when it only needs to be present in one copy in your cells for its associated traits to be discernible.

  • So do you have six fingers on your right hand? No? Okay, don't prepare to die I guess.

  • Just because a gene is dominant doesn't necessarily mean it's common.

  • It's actually a lot more complicated than that.

  • The development of complex, finger-having organisms like us starts with one cell: a zygote.

  • That cell begins to divide into more cells, and at various points in the development process, those cells turn into arms, legs, a heart, a brain, and everything else.

  • This process is called cellular differentiation, and what the cells turn into is dictated by your genes.

  • Scientists first characterized one of these important developmental genes back in the 1980s in studies of fruit fly development.

  • They noticed that a group of flies with a specific mutation turned out stumpy and covered in spiky protrusions.

  • So naturally they named the gene hedgehog, because it made the flies look a little bit like hedgehogs.

  • Andfly biologists are like that, I guess.

  • Fast forward to the 1990s, where researchers had found three versions of the hedgehog gene in mammalsone of them being sonic hedgehog.

  • Yes, named after that Sonic.

  • The sonic hedgehog gene codes for a type of protein known as a morphogen.

  • A morphogen is a kind of molecular signal that gets sent out to cells to tell them what to become.

  • When a cell detects the presence of sonic hedgehog, a complex chain of molecular events is touched off, eventually resulting in changes in how that cell's genes are expressed.

  • How a cell responds to sonic hedgehog's signal depends on just how much of the protein it detects.

  • Which can lead to complex patterns, like our fingers and toes.

  • Our hands and feet start out as a lump of tissue called a limb bud.

  • Sonic hedgehog is especially concentrated in an area on one side of that lump of cells, and there's less of it as you go to the other end.

  • An area of tissue that detects a lot of sonic hedgehog becomes a pinky; none at all, and you get a thumb.

  • If there's too much of that signal in the wrong place, though, other fingers start to developand that's how you get polydactyly.

  • This is how a polydactyly-causing mutation can be dominant:

  • A bunch of genes influence sonic hedgehog signaling, and it only takes a single faulty copy of a gene to put some sonic hedgehog where it doesn't belong.

  • Depending on how much sonic hedgehog is present and where, you can end up with different outcomes.

  • If lots of sonic hedgehog is present on the thumb side of the hand, that can lead to the development of two thumbs.

  • Cats with extra thumbs: their only weakness, solved. No can opener is safe.

  • Now, there are a handful of other forms of polydactyly, influenced by a handful of different genes,

  • as well as a condition called syndactyly, where a lack of sonic hedgehog signal results in fused fingers and toes.

  • Development requires a ton of genes to work together, and a single mutation can be enough to nudge sonic hedgehog all out of whack.

  • Which just goes to show that building a humanor a catis a pretty impressive feat of cell sculpting.

  • Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow, and thanks to our lovely patrons who support everything we do.

  • If you'd like to help us out, and earn some extra neat perks along the way, check out patreon.com/scishow.

  • [OUTRO ♪]

[INTRO ♪]

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it