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March 20, 2025

From dinosaurs to birds: The origins of feather formation

Alteration of the expression of the co-called 'Sonic Hedgehog' gene can transform feet scale and wing feathers. While a transient over-expression of the gene can permanently turn feet scales into feathers, it is much harder to disrupt feather development itself. The network of interacting genes determining feathers is very robust, ensuring their proper development even under substantial genetic or environmental perturbations. Credit: Fabrice Berger & Michel Milinkovitch 2025 (CC-BY 4.0, creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
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Alteration of the expression of the co-called 'Sonic Hedgehog' gene can transform feet scale and wing feathers. While a transient over-expression of the gene can permanently turn feet scales into feathers, it is much harder to disrupt feather development itself. The network of interacting genes determining feathers is very robust, ensuring their proper development even under substantial genetic or environmental perturbations. Credit: Fabrice Berger & Michel Milinkovitch 2025 (CC-BY 4.0, creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

Feathers are among the most complex cutaneous appendages in the animal kingdom. While their evolutionary origin has been widely debated, paleontological discoveries and developmental biology studies suggest that feathers evolved from simple structures known as proto-feathers.

These primitive structures, composed of a single tubular filament, emerged around 200 million years ago in certain dinosaurs. Paleontologists continue to discuss the possibility of their even earlier presence in the common ancestor of dinosaurs and pterosaurs (the first flying vertebrates with membranous wings) around 240 million years ago.

Proto-feathers are simple, cylindrical filaments. They differ from modern feathers by the absence of barbs and barbules, and by the lack of a follicle—an invagination at their base.

The emergence of proto-feathers likely marked the first key step in feather evolution, initially providing and ornamentation before being progressively modified under to give rise to the more complex structures that enabled flight.

The laboratory of Michel Milinkovitch, professor at the Department of Genetics and Evolution in the Faculty of Science at UNIGE, studies the role of molecular signaling pathways ( that transmit messages within and between cells), such as the Sonic Hedgehog (Shh) pathway, in the embryonic of scales, hair, and feathers in modern vertebrates.

His work has been published in PLOS Biology.

In a previous study, Swiss scientists stimulated the Shh pathway by injecting an activating molecule into the blood vessels of chicken embryos and observed the complete and permanent transformation of scales into feathers on the bird's feet.

At the 12th day of incubation, feather buds exhibit longitudinal domains of cell density that correspond to the barbs of the future down feather. Credit: Rory Cooper & Michel Milinkovitch (CC BY)
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At the 12th day of incubation, feather buds exhibit longitudinal domains of cell density that correspond to the barbs of the future down feather. Credit: Rory Cooper & Michel Milinkovitch (CC BY)

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Recreating the first dinosaur proto-feathers

"Since the Shh pathway plays a crucial role in feather development, we wanted to observe what happens when it is inhibited," explains Rory Cooper, a postdoctoral researcher in Milinkovitch's lab and co-author of the study.

By injecting a molecule that blocks the Shh signaling pathway on the ninth day of embryonic development—just before feather buds appear on the wings—the two researchers observed the formation of unbranched and non-invaginated buds, resembling the putative early stages of proto-feathers.

However, from the 14th day of embryonic development, feather morphogenesis partially recovered. Furthermore, although the chicks hatched with patches of naked skin, dormant subcutaneous follicles were autonomously reactivated, eventually producing chickens with normal plumage.

"Our experiments show that while a transient disturbance in the development of foot scales can permanently turn them into feathers, it is much harder to permanently disrupt feather development itself," concludes Milinkovitch.

"Clearly, over the course of evolution, the network of interacting genes has become extremely robust, ensuring the proper development of feathers even under substantial genetic or environmental perturbations. The big challenge now is to understand how genetic interactions evolve to allow for the emergence of morphological novelties such as proto-feathers."

More information: Cooper RL, et al. In vivo sonic hedgehog pathway antagonism temporarily results in ancestral proto-featherlike structures in the chicken. PLOS Biology (2025).

Journal information: PLoS Biology

Provided by University of Geneva

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Feathers evolved from simple structures called proto-feathers, which appeared around 200 million years ago in certain dinosaurs. These cylindrical filaments lacked the complexity of modern feathers. Proto-feathers likely provided thermal insulation and ornamentation before evolving into structures enabling flight. Research on the Sonic Hedgehog (Shh) pathway in chicken embryos shows that inhibiting this pathway can recreate proto-feather-like structures, highlighting the robustness of genetic networks in feather development. Understanding these genetic interactions is crucial for comprehending the evolution of morphological novelties like proto-feathers.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.