Despite similarities in form, function, and even DNA, cells that appear to be related may have traversed very different evolutionary paths. Science magazine spotlights a new approach to identifying cell types based on a recent working group at SFI.

Biologists convened at the October "Cell types and Cell Type Origination" working group to discuss "a different, more reliable concept" for classifying , as systems biologist and group participant Stefanie Widder is quoted in Science. The group was organized through a collaboration between the Santa Fe Institute and Arizona State University's Center for Biosocial Complex Systems.

Instead of taking the traditional approach of typing a cell based on its structure, function, or location within an organism, the group took an evolutionary approach to classification, which focused on that reveal which parts of a cell's genome are active. These distinctive patterns of activity can point to differing evolutionary origins in apparently similar cells.

The Science article offers examples of classifying similar-seeming cells within the human brain and reproductive tract; delineating disparate evolutionary histories of neurons within a single nervous system; and figuring whether similar cells across species, such as striated muscle cells in vertebrates and cnidarians (jellyfish), indicate "evolutionary connectedness."

The working group participants are writing a synthesis paper that will clarify how to understand cells through gene expression patterns and the advantages of such an .

More information: E. Pennisi. Using evolution to better identify cell types, Science (2015). DOI: 10.1126/science.350.6261.618

Journal information: Science

Provided by Santa Fe Institute