Cell types are the basic building units of multicellular life, with extensive diversities. As the number and total class of cell types change with the species evolution, it has been proposed as “evolutionary units” with the potential for quasi-independent evolutionary change. The evolution of cell types is a crucial layer of comparative cell biology but is thus far not comprehensively studied.
This study comprehensively characterized the conservation and divergence of cell types during age-long evolution, using organism-wide cell atlases from seven animal species. Through systematic bioinformatics analysis, researchers proposed a cross-species organism-level cell-type evolutionary tree to trace the origin of major cell categories across evolution, and revealed important transcription factor (TF) regulons with high activity across cell categories for different species.
They found that muscle and neuron cells are conserved cell types, stromal cells and muscle cells evolved from a common ancestral cell state, and vertebrate secretory cells and neuron cells functional similarities reflect convergent evolution. In the invertebrate system, researchers have identified important evolutionary nodes. For example, important immune function cells in invertebrates, such as, gastrodermis (Nematostella), phagocytes (Schmidtea), and coelomocytes (C. elegans). In addition, the study showed a functionally conserved TF regulatory network underlying conserved cell types, and explored the characteristics of conservative TFs specific to cell type lineages.
This study reveals the conservation and diversity of cell types during species evolution, and provides a good framework for cross-platform and cross-species comparison of cell types.