zotero/storage/67D9K5HK/.zotero-ft-cache

122 lines
39 KiB
Plaintext
Raw Permalink Normal View History

2024-08-27 21:48:20 -05:00
RESEARCH ARTICLE National Science Review
7: 815822, 2020 doi: 10.1093/nsr/nwz206 Advance access publication 12 January 2020
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY & GENETICS
Evidence of proteins, chromosomes and chemical
markers of DNA in exceptionally preserved
dinosaur cartilage
Alida M. Bailleul 1,2,, Wenxia Zheng3, John R. Horner4, Brian K. Hall5,
Casey M. Holliday6 and Mary H. Schweitzer3,7,8
1Key Laboratory of Vertebrate Evolution and Human Origins, Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100044, China; 2CAS Center for Excellence in Life and Paleoenvironment, Beijing 100044, China; 3Department of Biological Sciences, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695, USA; 4Honors Program, Chapman University, Orange, CA 92866, USA; 5Department of Biology, Dalhousie University, Halifax, B3H 4R2, Canada; 6Department of Pathology and Anatomical Sciences, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65211, USA; 7North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences, Raleigh, NC 27601, USA and 8Department of Geology, University of Lund, 22362, Sweden
Corresponding author. E-mail: alida.bailleul@ivpp.ac.cn
Received 11 December 2019; Revised 9 January 2020; Accepted 10 January 2020
ABSTRACT
A histological ground-section from a duck-billed dinosaur nestling (Hypacrosaurus stebingeri) revealed microstructures morphologically consistent with nuclei and chromosomes in cells within calcified cartilage. We hypothesized that this exceptional cellular preservation extended to the molecular level and had molecular features in common with extant avian cartilage. Histochemical and immunological evidence supports in situ preservation of extracellular matrix components found in extant cartilage, including glycosaminoglycans and collagen type II. Furthermore, isolated Hypacrosaurus chondrocytes react positively with two DNA intercalating stains. Specific DNA staining is only observed inside the isolated cells, suggesting endogenous nuclear material survived fossilization. Our data support the hypothesis that calcified cartilage is preserved at the molecular level in this Mesozoic material, and suggest that remnants of once-living chondrocytes, including their DNA, may preserve for millions of years.
Keywords: cartilage, dinosaur, nuclei, chromosomes, collagen II, DNA markers
INTRODUCTION AND HISTOLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS
A nesting ground yielding dozens of disarticulated nestlings assigned to the herbivorous duck-billed dinosaur Hypacrosaurus stebingeri was discovered in the 1980s in the Upper Cretaceous (Campanian) Two Medicine Formation of northern Montana (Museum of the Rockies, MOR 548, locality TM066, Supplementary Text 1) [1,2]. Several limb and skull elements of these nestlings were subjected to microscopic analyses to answer growth-related questions [1] and to describe different types of cartilage [3]. The calcified cartilage seen within a supraoccipital in ground-section was especially interesting (Fig. 1BD). Within the chondro-osseous junction (i.e., the part of the growth plate where bone replaces cartilage) closest to the left exoccipital, the tissues presented excellent microscopic preservation, such that cartilage could be distinguished from bone by exhibiting a translucent, amorphous extracellular matrix (ECM) and round, hypertrophic chondrocyte lacunae (Fig. 1B). At higher magnification,
cellular structures still sharing a single lacuna (i.e., a cell doublet) [4,5] were seen, consistent with chondrocytes at the end of mitosis (Fig. 1C, pink arrow; Supplementary Fig. 1). Although many lacunae appear empty (Fig. 1B and C, green arrow), other lacunae (pink arrow) contain a material distinct from the matrix, including a darker material consistent in shape and location with a nucleus (Fig. 1C, white arrows). This is comparable to features of extant calcified cartilage [4] observed in ground sections of defleshed, juvenile emu skulls, where some lacunae are empty, and others retain cells and intracellular contents including nuclei (Fig. 1G). Near the cell doublet (Fig. 1C), other microscopic structures consist of dark, condensed and elongated material, aligned along a plane and slightly mirroring each other (Fig. 1D). The cell lacuna surrounding these structures is visible (Fig. 1D, black arrow), but is even clearer under a different light setting (with a condenser, Supplementary Fig. 1). This dark material shares microstructural features with condensed chromatin, more precisely of chromosomes in metaphase of the cell cycle [6]. Similar
C© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of China Science Publishing & Media Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/nsr/article/7/4/815/5762999 by guest on 15 August 2024
816 Natl Sci Rev, 2020, Vol. 7, No. 4 RESEARCH ARTICLE
Ground sections ~100 μm
Emu Hypacrosaurus
Figure 1. Ground section of Hypacrosaurus (MOR 548) supraoccipital shows exceptional histological preservation of calcified cartilage. (A) An isolated supraoccipital (So) of Hypacrosaurus in dorsal view. (BD) Ground section of another So showing calcified cartilage with hypertrophic chondrocyte lacunae. (C) Some cell doublets appear empty (green arrow), but others (pink arrow) present darker, condensed material consistent in shape and location with a nucleus (white arrows). (D) Dark, condensed, and elongated material with morphological characteristics of metaphase chromosomes. The limit of the cell lacuna is visible (black arrow). (E) Caudal view of a juvenile emu skull (810 months old) showing the So and exoccipitals (Exo) in articulation. (F, G) Ground section (stained with Toluidine blue) of calcified cartilage from this emu skull showing cell doublets (pink arrows) with remnants of nuclei (white arrows) and others without intracellular content (green arrow).
chromosome-like structures have been observed in a fossil fern from the Jurassic [7], but the present study reports this type of exceptional microscopic preservation, at the sub-cellular level, in a fossil vertebrate and validates the observations with biochemistry. We hypothesized that this exceptional morphological preservation would extend to the molecular level when methods commonly used to identify molecular and chemical markers in extant cartilage were applied to these fossil tissues. To test this hypothesis, we investigated molecular preservation of Hypacrosaurus cartilage at the extracellular, cellular and intracellular levels in another supraoccipital from the same nesting ground (Fig. 1A), similar in size to the one in which these structures were originally observed (Fig. 1BD). This study specimen had not been previously embedded in resin. We capitalized on distinct chemical differences between cartilage and bone within this second Hypacrosaurus supraoccipital (Fig. 1A), and used the supraoccipitals of juvenile emus (Dromaius novaehollandiae) as extant homologues.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Histology
During ontogeny, the supraoccipital arises as a primary cartilage which is then replaced by bone via endochondral ossification [3]. Growth occurs mostly at the chondro-osseous junction, where chondrocytes undergo cell division and hypertro
phy. Chondrocytes encased in lacunae secrete ECM components including collagen II and glycosaminoglycans [4,8]. Conversely, osteoblasts and osteocytes secrete collagen type I, minimal amounts of glycosaminoglycans [9], and non-collagenous proteins [10]. Hypertrophic chondrocytes of the chondroosseous junction have different fates (Supplementary Text 2) but many undergo cell death [4,5,11], eventually resulting in empty lacunae (e.g., Fig. 1G) followed by replacement with bone [4,12]. Even though one fossil cell preserves structures morphologically consistent with mitotic chromosomes in metaphase (Fig. 1D), we propose, based upon living comparisons, that it is not undergoing normal cell division, but rather presents the characteristics of a hypertrophic chondrocyte undergoing an early stage of cell death called chondroptosis [11,13,14] (Supplementary Fig. 1; Supplementary Text 2, 3). In this type of abnormal mitosis, specifically identified in senescent hypertrophic chondrocytes of avian growth plates, the DNA condenses and chromosomes adopt a metaphase-like arrangement [1315] (Supplementary Text 2).
Histochemistry
The ECM of extant cartilage and bone can be differentiated using Alcian blue, a histochemical stain that reacts intensely with acidic materials and much less so with basic ones. Cartilage incorporates acid mucins and glycosaminoglycans not found in bone
Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/nsr/article/7/4/815/5762999 by guest on 15 August 2024
RESEARCH ARTICLE Bailleul et al. 817
Unstained Alcian blue stain
Cartilage Bone Cartilage Bone
Paraffin sections - 5 μm
Emu Hypacrosaurus
Figure 2. Alcian blue histochemical stain capitalized on differential presence of glycosaminoglycans in the calcified cartilage and bone of Hypacrosaurus. Unstained (A, B, E, F) and Alcian-blue stained (C, D, G, H) paraffin sections of Hypacrosaurus and emu cartilage and bone. A strong, positive blue staining is seen in Hypacrosaurus cartilage (C), comparable to the intense, but darker stain found in modern emu cartilage (G). This suggests that glycosaminoglycans are still present in the cartilaginous matrix of this dinosaur. In contrast, the fossil and extant bones show a very light blue stain (D, H). Images are at the same scale.
[4,16]. Alcian blue was previously employed to differentiate tissues in Tyrannosaurus rex [16] and Yanornis martini [17]; we applied it here to paraffin sections of demineralized Hypacrosaurus cartilage and bone. Fossil (Fig. 2C) and extant (Fig. 2G) cartilage both demonstrated intense staining when compared to stained demineralized bone from the same organisms (Fig. 2D, H), supporting chemical differentiation between dinosaur tissues similar to that seen in extant tissues, and suggesting preservation of the original chemistry in these ancient tissues.
Immunofluorescence and Immunohistochemistry
Immunohistochemistry supports the persistence of protein epitopes consistent with collagen II (Fig. 3), the most abundant protein comprising the ECM of extant cartilage [4]. Ultra-thin sections of demineralized Hypacrosaurus cartilage were exposed to antibodies raised against avian collagen II. Green fluorescence on tissues reflects the location of antibody-antigen complexes (Fig. 3B). In extant emu cartilage, binding is present throughout the entire matrix (Fig. 3F). Binding in fossil cartilage is represented by a more globular pattern (Fig. 3B), suggesting that preserved collagen II epitopes are not homogenously distributed in the ECM of this Hypacrosaurus. Furthemore, immunoreactivity in Hypacrosaurus cartilage is diminished when compared to emu (Fig. 3F), as illustrated by longer integration times and fainter signal. This may indicate that fewer epitopes are preserved in the ancient tissues, or alternatively, that there is more phylogenetic distance between the dinosaur proteins and chicken proteins used to generate the antiserum. If the latter,
not all epitopes would have been present in the living dinosaur. To account for the possibility of non-specific binding, we digested the fossil and extant tissues with collagenase II, an enzyme specific for collagen II [18]. At the same integration times and parameters as in non-digested tissues, antibody reactivity was significantly decreased after digestion of both extant (Fig. 3H) and fossil tissues (Fig. 3D); providing further support for the presence of collagen II, and confirming the specificity of antibodies used in this study. As an additional specificity control, fossilized cartilage was exposed to antibodies raised against avian collagen I, the dominant protein in bone [10]. Because extant primary cartilage does not usually express collagen I [4], no binding was expected, and none was observed in either Hypacrosaurus (Fig. 3J) or emu cartilage (Fig. 3L). To control for non-specific binding of the secondary antibody or fluorescent label, primary antibodies were omitted, while keeping all other conditions identical; no cross-reactivity was observed (Supplementary Fig. 2). The most parsimonious explanation for these results is that epitopes of collagen II are preserved in this 75 million year-old dinosaur. Collagen II is not produced by microbes; positing a microbial source is not parsimonious or congruent with the data.
Isolation of chondrocytes and DNA assays
Although osteocytes have previously been isolated from dinosaur bone [19,20], here, we show the first isolated dinosaur chondrocytes (Fig. 4). Unlike dinosaur osteocytes that often present a reddish hue
Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/nsr/article/7/4/815/5762999 by guest on 15 August 2024
818 Natl Sci Rev, 2020, Vol. 7, No. 4 RESEARCH ARTICLE
Anti-Chick Collagen II Ab
Anti-Chick Collagen I Ab
Anti-Chick Collagen II Ab after Collagenase II
Ultrathin sections - 200 nm
Emu
Emu
Hypacrosaurus Hypacrosaurus
Figure 3. Immunohistochemical staining of Hypacrosaurus cartilage. (A, C, E, G, I, K) are overlay images showing cartilage and localized binding; (B, D, F, H, J, L) are fluorescent images using FITC label. Hypacrosaurus calcified cartilage (A, B) shows positive, localized staining when exposed to antibodies (Ab) raised against avian Collagen II, with green fluorescent signal representing antibody-antigen complexes arranged globularly in the extracellular matrix. Immunoreactivity is diminished, as illustrated by longer integration time and fainter signal, when compared to calcified and hyaline cartilage from an emu (E, F). Antibody reactivity was decreased after collagenase II digestion in Hypacrosaurus (CD) and emu cartilage (GH), demonstrating that reactivity to Collagen II is specific for epitopes of that protein. Hypacrosaurus (I, J) and emu cartilage (K, L) shows no staining when exposed to antibodies rained against avian Collagen I. Images are at the same scale.
Hypacrosaurus
Emu
Isolated chondrocytes
Unstained PI stain DAPI stain
Figure 4. Isolated chondrocytes of Hypacrosaurus and their positive response to two DNA assays. (A, B, E) Isolated chondrocytes of Hypacrosaurus and emu photographed under transmitted light (green arrows). Hypacrosaurus chondrocytes were successfully isolated as individual cells (A) and cell doublets (B). Hypacrosaurus (C) and emu chondrocytes (F) showing positive response to propidium iodide (PI), a DNA intercalating dye, to a small and circular region that locates intracellularly (white arrows). Hypacrosaurus (D) and emu chondrocytes (G) also show a similar binding when exposed to 4,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole dihydrochloride (DAPI), another DNA-specific stain (black arrows) although in both cases, emu cell staining is significantly greater than in the dinosaur cells.
due to iron inclusions [21], Hypacrosaurus chondrocytes are transparent (Fig. 4A and B), suggesting a different preservation mode. They lack filopodia and present the round morphology consistent with all vertebrate chondrocytes [22] (including emu, Fig. 4E), but distinct from the fusiform shape of osteocytes [20]. A few cell doublets were also isolated in Hypacrosaurus (e.g., Fig. 4B).
Although the cells appeared empty under transmitted light (as do emu chondrocytes) (Fig. 4A and B), we tested these microstructures for the presence of chemical markers consistent with DNA [20] using two complementary histochemical stains, propidium iodide (PI) [23] and 4,6-diamidino-2phenylindole dihydrochloride (DAPI) [24]. PI intercalates between every four to five base pairs of double-stranded DNA, with little or no sequence preference, and is detected in red frequencies when stimulated by fluorescent light [23]. PI does not stain DNA in a living cell, but only in dead cells. Therefore, positive PI staining cannot arise from contamination with living (i.e., microbial) cells [25]. DAPI binds preferentially to double-stranded DNA in both living and dead cells. It is sequence dependent requiring at least three successive AT base pairs as a binding site [24]. Specific staining of both PI (Fig. 4C) and DAPI (Fig. 4D) is observed inside the isolated cartilage cells of Hypacrosaurus, following the pattern seen in extant cells (Fig. 4F and G), but diminished in the ancient ones. This not only supports that the compound within these cells is chemically consistent with DNA, but that material is double stranded, and of a minimum length of 6 base pairs [24]. These molecules must be reduced in concentration relative to the extant ones because of the greatly reduced area stained; this pattern was also observed with dinosaur osteocytes (in Tyrannosaurus rex and Brachylophosaurus canadensis) [20]. Typical taphonomic alteration of DNA involves, among other processes, backbone breakage [26], a phenomenon expected to have occurred in cells of this antiquity. Additionally, because the PI stain in the fossil cells localizes to such a small area, it may indicate that the nuclear material was in a condensed state at the time of death. DNA condensation occurs naturally during mitotis, interphase, and all types of cell death (Supplementary Text 2) [27,28]. Because the isolated cells of Hypacrosaurus come from the chondro-osseous junction, where most chondrocytes eventually die, it is possible that the cells showing PI and DAPI staining (Fig. 4C and D) were senescent (e.g., chondroptotic, or apoptotic cells), with condensed nuclear material. Extant senescent chondrocytes can show different morphologies of condensed nuclear material (with or without a fragmented nuclear membrane), such as condensed chromatin granules, a chromosomelike arrangement, or multiple apoptotic condensations (Supplementary Text 2, 3). An alternative hypothesis, that the staining arises from microbial contaminant, is not supported (contra [25,29]); there is no mechanism for exogenous DNA to penetrate an intact membrane and
Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/nsr/article/7/4/815/5762999 by guest on 15 August 2024
RESEARCH ARTICLE Bailleul et al. 819
localize to a single point specifically inside the cell, demonstrating no reactivity in any other region. We caution that only the sequencing of the material reactive to both PI and DAPI can confirm that it is dinosaurian in origin, however the combined data at the histological, cellular and molecular levels (Figs 14) robustly support the hypothesis that the cartilage of Hypacrosaurus has remnants of original chondrocytes, original nuclear material, and endogenous compounds chemically consistent with DNA. In addition, these data support that structures morphologically consistent with nuclei and chromosomes, first seen in petrographic ground sections (Fig. 1; Supplementary Fig. 1) are endogenous to this dinosaur. Although it has been suggested that similar, cell-like structures recovered in dinosaur bones could be the result of biofilm infiltration [25], the pattern of reactivity observed when biofilm was exposed to DAPI and PI staining during a previous study [20] is inconsistent with the one observed here. It is reasonable and logical to propose that fossil dinosaur bone contains contaminating microbial communities [29], but the specific case that we present here, where isolated chondrocytes show intracellular reactivity with PI and DAPI (Fig. 4), does not match the staining pattern of cell clusters of contaminating biofilms [29]. We have shown that cartilage found in MOR 548 is extremely well preserved, not only at the histological level with an unreported, sub-cellular type of preservation (Fig. 1; Supplementary Fig. 1), but also at the cellular and the molecular levels (Figs 24). This study provides the first clear chemical and molecular demonstration of calcified cartilage preservation in Mesozoic skeletal material, and suggests that in addition to cartilage-specific collagen II, DNA, or at least the chemical markers of DNA (for example, chemically altered base pairs that can still react to PI and DAPI), may preserve for millions of years. The assumption of a temporal limit on molecular longevity has hindered the pursuit of molecular data from fossils older than 1 million years (MA). A short temporal range is predicted for informative biomolecules (1 MA for proteins, and 100,000 years for DNA; with 700,000 years as the oldest genome report) [3032]. However, these assumptions have been challenged by multiple studies on Mesozoic fossil remains reporting evidence of chemical and organic remnants, including extracellular proteins and pigments (e.g., [3337]), cytoskeletal proteins [20], compounds that localize to cell interiors that are chemically consistent with DNA [20; and the present study] and peptide sequence data including histone proteins, a protein not found in bacteria [3840].
Here, data derived from dinosaurian calcified cartilage add to the growing evidence across specimens and biomolecules that original, endogenous organics persist into deep time under exceptional conditions. Interestingly, all the materials collected at this nesting ground were disarticulated, suggesting that a phenomenon other than rapid burial allowed such exquisite preservation (Supplementary Text 1). Other juvenile hadrosaur material from the Two Medicine formation showed exquisite preservation of cartilage [41]. Calcified cartilage may represent a better candidate than bone for biomolecule preservation, because it exhibits multiple factors that contribute to molecular stabilization [42]. These include an ECM without vascularization, making it less porous, with less surface area available for ground water and microbes that result in biodeterioration; an ECM with a higher mineral:organic ratio than that of bone [43]; and hypoxia [44]. Oxygen levels are lowest specifically in the calcified, hypertrophic chondrocyte zone, which may serve to sequester cells, preventing oxidative damage.
CONCLUSION
The identification of chemical markers of DNA in Hypacrosaurus suggest it may preserve much longer than originally proposed [30,31]. Even though it is clear that contamination does exist in fossil material and complicates identifications of original organic molecules, it can be accounted for with proper controls. Contamination is not a plausible explanation in this case, and to this date, the possible preservation of original proteins and DNA in deep time has not been convincingly eliminated with data. Although extensive research and sequencing is required to further understand DNA preservation in Mesozoic material, along with its chemical and molecular alterations, our data suggest the preserved nuclear material in Hypacrosaurus was in a condensed state at the time of the death of the organism, which may have contributed to its stability. We propose that DNA condensation may be a favorable process to its fossilization. Additionally, as was suggested for protein fossilization [20,45,46], crosslinking may be another mechanism involved in the preservation of DNA in deep time.
METHODS
All assays using fossil material were conducted in lab facilities dedicated to fossil analyses, using aseptic techniques, and did not at any time come in contact with homologous tissues from emu used as positive controls. The latter were analyzed in a separate lab, using dedicated instruments and solutions.
Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/nsr/article/7/4/815/5762999 by guest on 15 August 2024
820 Natl Sci Rev, 2020, Vol. 7, No. 4 RESEARCH ARTICLE
Fossil material
We used two disarticulated supraoccipitals (bones of the basicranium) of Hypacrosaurus stebingeri (MOR 548) that were similar in size and preservation state. The first was embedded in polyester resin and prepared at the MOR in the 1980s (Fig. 1BD). Because resin interferes with some molecular methods, a second non-embedded supraoccipital (Fig. 1A) from the same fossil site was chosen to perform chemical and molecular analyses (Figs 24). Based on their size, these elements were estimated to belong to nestlings with a skull length of about 20 cm, and an overall full length of 2 m [1,3]. Adults of this species usually reach a full length of 9 m [47].
Extant material
We used a total of four juvenile emus (Dromaius novaehollandiae) donated cadaveric to the MOR by Montana Emu Ranch, between a few weeks and a few months post-hatching (between 810 months). Two were kept frozen, and two were sent to a dermestid beetle colony and defleshed for other studies on emu skulls [48] (in emu skulls, most of the hyaline, unmineralized cartilage is eaten by beetles, leaving mostly calcified cartilage). Data for the ground section (Fig. 1EG) is from the emu skull MOR OST 1802 [48]. Histochemical, immunological and DNA staining were performed on the other three emu specimens at the supraoccipitalexoccipital junction (homologous to the calcified cartilage region of interest in Hypacrosaurus).
Ground sections
One supraoccipital of MOR 548 was embedded whole in polyester resin (according to standard methods) [49]. A relatively thick slice taken using a Buehler Isomet 1000 precision saw was attached to a glass slide with epoxy and ground to desired thickness (100 microns) with a Buehler Ecomet Grinder. The slide (Fig. 1BD) was studied by light microscopy under transmitted light with a Nikon Optiphot-Pol polarizing microscope. Photographs were taken with a Nikon DS-Fi1 digital sight camera and the NIS ELEMENTS BR 4.13 software. For comparison with extant emu material (Fig. 1EG), fragments including basicranial cartilaginous joints (synchondroses) from the skull of MOR OST 1802 were extracted with a dremel and diamond blade, fixed in 10% neutral buffered formalin (NBF), and further prepared for embedding and stained with Toluidine blue (Supplementary Methods).
Histochemistry/Alcian blue staining
Fragments taken from the periphery of the supraoccipital of MOR 548 were chosen to optimize chances of obtaining mostly cartilage, rather than bone. Emu samples also included calcified cartilage from the supraoccipital-exoccipital synchondrosis, as well as some underlying bone. These fragments from extant emu were fixed with 10% NBF overnight, then demineralized in 500 mM EDTA (disodium ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid) (pH 8.0) until all mineral was removed, and again subjected to fixation as above. Because of the fragile nature of demineralized fossil tissues, MOR 548 samples were embedded in 3% agar (Becton Dickinson Cat# 214530) to stabilize the tissues prior to sectioning. Extant tissues and agar embedded tissues from MOR 548 were then subjected to routine preparation for paraffin histology, embedded in paraffin, cut on a microtome at 5 microns, and stained with Alcian blue (Supplementary Methods).
Immunofluorescence/ Immunohistochemistry
Fossil fragments were first embedded in 3% agar (Becton Dickinson Cat# 214530), then demineralized in EDTA (0.5 M, pH 8.0) for two weeks, washed with 1× phosphate buffered saline (PBS) and prepared for further embedding and sectioning for analyses (Supplementary Methods). In a separate laboratory, cartilage tissues were sampled from a dry emu skull fragment (MOR-OST 1800), fixed for one hour at room temperature in 10% NBF (Supplementary Methods). Sections (200 nm) were cut on a Leica EM UC6 Ultramicrotome and exposed to a Rabbit antichicken collagen type II (Abcam ab21290) primary antibody (Supplementary Methods). For antibodies raised against avian collagen I, we used the antibody US Biological C751013B. Sections were also incubated in antibody dilution buffer only, to which no primary antibodies were added, to control for spurious binding of the secondary antibody (Supplementary Fig. 2).
Isolation of chondrocytes and DAPI/PI Staining
Fragments were demineralized in EDTA (0.5 M, pH 8.0) for at least 2 weeks with daily changes. Resulting debris after demineralization were collected from the bottom of the wells and centrifuged for 2 min at 400 rcf. After removing the supernatant, the pellets were re-suspended in 1× PBS to remove the
Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/nsr/article/7/4/815/5762999 by guest on 15 August 2024
RESEARCH ARTICLE Bailleul et al. 821
remaining EDTA and the process was repeated three times. After final centrifugation, the pellets were incubated with the iron chelator pyridoxal isonicotinoyl hydrazone (PIH) solution (10 mM PIH in 50 mM NaOH [50]) overnight at room temperature, then washed with 1× PBS and centrifuged to form cell pellets, used for DAPI/PI staining (Supplementary Methods). Emu cartilage layers were excised from the supraoccipital-exoccipital synchondrosis of a young emu (but more cartilage was needed so femoral cartilage was excised as well), incubated in 0.1% Sodium Azide for 1.5 hours then cut into 0.51 mm slices with a sterile razor blade. Slices were then digested with 3 mg/mL collagenase type II (Worthington CLS-2) in Dulbeccos phosphate-buffered saline (D-PBS) pH 7.2 with 0.1% Sodium Azide at 37◦C overnight or until the majority of the cartilage matrix was removed. The samples were centrifuged at 300 rcf for 5 min to pellet cells. Cells were resuspended in 10% NBF (pH 7.27.4) at room temperature for 30 min to fix, then centrifuged as before, and washed twice with PBS. Cells were pelleted and subjected to DAPI/PI staining (Supplementary Methods).
SUPPLEMENTARY DATA
Supplementary data are available at NSR online.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
We thank Zhonghe Zhou for fruitful discussions and comments. We thank John Scannella, the MOR, the Gabriel Lab for Cellular and Molecular Paleontology, Ellen-The ́re`se Lamm, Karen Chin and Allison Gentry for laboratory help; Don Collins (Montana Emu Ranch) for donating cadaveric emus; Elena Schroeter and Dana Rashid for discussions; and Mikhail Kovalenko (University of Missouri) for whole-slide imaging.
FUNDING
This work was supported by the National Science Foundation INSPIRE grant (Division of Earth Sciences) (EAR-1344198 to M.H.S. and W.Z); Franklin M. and Susan Packard Orr; Vance and Gail Mullis (to M.H.S. and W.Z); Gerry Ohrstrom (to A.M.B. and J.R.H.); the American Association of Anatomists Short-Term Visiting Scholarship (to A.M.B.); the Chinese Academy of SciencesPresidents International Fellowship Initiative (CAS-PIFI) (to A.M.B) and NSF-IOS grant (Division of Integrative Organismal Systems) (1457319 to C.M.H and A.M.B).
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
A.M.B, M.H.S. designed the study; A.M.B, W.Z. performed experiments, and collected the data; A.M.B, B.K.H, M.H.S. ana
lyzed cellular data; all authors analyzed and interpreted some results; J.R.H. designed original paleohistological study; J.R.H., M.H.S. contributed materials/reagents and laboratory space; A.M.B, M.H.S wrote the manuscript; A.M.B, M.H.S, W.Z. wrote the supplementary materials; J.R.H., B.K.H., C.M.H. commented on the manuscript.
Conflict of interest statement. None declared.
REFERENCES
1. Horner JR and Currie PJ. Embryonic and neonatal morphology and ontogeny of a new species of Hypacrosaurus (Ornithischia, Lambeosauridae) from Montana and Alberta. In: Carpenter K, Hirsch KE and Horner JR (eds.). Dinosaur Eggs and Babies. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1994, 31236. 2. Varricchio DJ and Horner JR. Hadrosaurid and lambeosaurid bone beds from the Upper Cretaceous Two Medicine Formation of Montana: taphonomic and biologic implications. Can J Earth Sci 1993; 30: 9971006. 3. Bailleul AM, Hall BK and Horner JR. First evidence of dinosaurian secondary cartilage in the post-hatching skull of Hypacrosaurus stebingeri (Dinosauria, Ornithischia). PLoS One 2012; 7: e36112. 4. Hall BK. Chapter 3—Cartilage. In: Bones and Cartilage. San Diego: Academic Press, 2005, 3347. 5. Roach HI, Erenpreisa J and Aigner T. Osteogenic differentiation of hypertrophic chondrocytes involves asymmetric cell divisions and apoptosis. J Cell Biol 1995; 131: 48394. 6. Nurse P. A long twentieth century of the cell cycle and beyond. Cell 2000; 100: 718. 7. Bomfleur B, McLoughlin S and Vajda V. Fossilized nuclei and chromosomes reveal 180 million years of genomic stasis in royal ferns. Science 2014; 343: 13767. 8. Roughley PJ and Lee ER. Cartilage proteoglycans: structure and potential functions. Microsc Res Tech 1994; 28: 38597. 9. Wang X, Ford BC and Praul CA et al. Characterization of the noncollagenous proteins in avian cortical and medullary bone. Comp Biochem Physiol B Biochem Mol Biol 2005; 140: 66572.
10. Hall BK. Chapter 2—Bone. In: Bones and Cartilage. San Diego: Academic Press, 2005, 1332. 11. Roach H, Aigner T and Kouri J. Chondroptosis: a variant of apoptotic cell death in chondrocytes? Apoptosis 2004; 9: 26577. 12. Farquharson C and Jefferies D. Chondrocytes and longitudinal bone growth: the development of tibial dyschondroplasia. Poult Sci 2000; 79: 9941004. 13. Erenpreisa J and Roach HI. Aberrant death in dark chondrocytes of the avian growth plate. Cell Death Differ 1998; 5: 606. 14. E ̄renpreisa J and Zhukotsky A. Interphase genome as the active space: chromatin dynamics during chick embryo chondrogenesis. Mech Ageing Dev 1993; 67: 2132. 15. Erenpreisa J and Roach HI. Aberrations of cell cycle and cell death in normal development of the chick embryo growth plate. Mech Ageing Dev 1999; 108: 22738.
16. Schweitzer MH, Zheng W and Zanno L et al. Chemistry supports the identification of gender-specific reproductive tissue in Tyrannosaurus rex. Sci Rep 2016; 6: 23099.
Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/nsr/article/7/4/815/5762999 by guest on 15 August 2024
822 Natl Sci Rev, 2020, Vol. 7, No. 4 RESEARCH ARTICLE
17. Bailleul AM, Li Z and OConnor J et al. Origin of the avian predentary and evidence of a unique form of cranial kinesis in Cretaceous ornithuromorphs. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 2019; 116: 24696706. 18. Buschmann MD, Gluzband YA and Grodzinsky AJ et al. Mechanical compression modulates matrix biosynthesis in chondrocyte/agarose culture. J Cell Sci 1995; 108: 1497508. 19. Schweitzer MH, Wittmeyer JL and Horner JR et al. Soft-tissue vessels and cellular preservation in Tyrannosaurus rex. Science 2005; 307: 19525. 20. Schweitzer MH, Zheng W and Cleland TP et al. Molecular analyses of dinosaur osteocytes support the presence of endogenous molecules. Bone 2013; 52: 41423. 21. Schweitzer MH, Wittmeyer JL and Horner JR. Soft tissue and cellular preservation in vertebrate skeletal elements from the Cretaceous to the present. Proc R Soc B 2007; 274: 18397. 22. Smith MM and Hall BK. Development and evolutionary origins of vertebrate skeletogenic and odontogenic tissues. Biol Rev 1990; 65: 277373. 23. Yeh C-JG, Hsi B-L and Faulk WP. Propidium iodide as a nuclear marker in immunofluorescence. II. Use with cellular identification and viability studies. J Immunol Methods 1981; 43: 26975.
24. Kapuscinski J. DAPI: a DNA-specific fluorescent probe. Biotech Histochem 1995; 70: 22033. 25. Kaye TG, Gaugler G and Sawlowicz Z. Dinosaurian soft tissues interpreted as bacterial biofilms. PLoS One 2008; 3: e2808. 26. Hofreiter M, Serre D and Poinar HN et al. Ancient DNA. Nat Rev Genet 2001; 2: 3539. 27. Roach H and Clarke N. Physiological cell death of chondrocytes in vivo is not confined to apoptosis: new observations on the mammalian growth plate. J Bone Joint Surg Br 2000; 82: 60113.
28. Swedlow JR and Hirano T. The making of the mitotic chromosome: modern insights into classical questions. Mol Cell 2003; 11: 55769. 29. Saitta ET, Liang R and Lau MC et al. Cretaceous dinosaur bone contains recent organic material and provides an environment conducive to microbial communities. eLife 2019; 8: e46205. 30. Lindahl T. Instability and decay of the primary structure of DNA. Nature 1993; 362: 70915. 31. Willerslev E and Cooper A. Ancient DNA. Proc R Soc B 2005; 272: 316. 32. Orlando L, Ginolhac A and Zhang G et al. Recalibrating Equus evolution using the genome sequence of an early Middle Pleistocene horse. Nature 2013; 499: 748. 33. Schweitzer MH, Suo Z and Avci R et al. Analyses of soft tissue from Tyrannosaurus rex suggest the presence of protein. Science 2007; 316: 27780. 34. Lindgren J, Kuriyama T and Madsen H et al. Biochemistry and adaptive colouration of an exceptionally preserved juvenile fossil sea turtle. Sci Rep 2017; 7: 13324.
35. Lindgren J, Uvdal P and Engdahl A et al. Microspectroscopic evidence of Cretaceous bone proteins. PLoS One 2011; 6: e19445. 36. Pan Y, Zheng W and Moyer AE et al. Molecular evidence of keratin and melanosomes in feathers of the Early Cretaceous bird Eoconfuciusornis. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 2016; 113: E79007.
37. Wiemann J, Yang T-R and Norell MA. Dinosaur egg colour had a single evolutionary origin. Nature 2018; 563: 5558. 38. Asara JM, Schweitzer MH and Freimark LM et al. Protein sequences from mastodon and Tyrannosaurus rex revealed by mass spectrometry. Science 2007; 316: 2805. 39. Cleland TP, Schroeter ER and Zamdborg L et al. Mass spectrometry and antibody-based characterization of blood vessels from Brachylophosaurus canadensis. J Proteome Res 2015; 14: 525262.
40. Schroeter ER, DeHart CJ and Cleland TP et al. Expansion for the Brachylophosaurus canadensis collagen I sequence and additional evidence of the preservation of Cretaceous protein. J Proteome Res 2017; 16: 92032. 41. Barreto C, Albrecht RM and Bjorling DE et al. Evidence of the growth plate and the growth of long bones in juvenile dinosaurs. Science 1993; 262: 20203. 42. Collins MJ, NielsenMarsh CM and Hiller J et al. The survival of organic matter in bone: a review. Archaeometry 2002; 44: 38394. 43. Goret-Nicaise M and Dhem A. Comparison of the calcium content of different tissues present in the human mandible. Acta Anat (Basel) 1985; 124: 16772. 44. Haselgrove JC, Shapiro IM and Silverton SF. Computer modeling of the oxygen supply and demand of cells of the avian growth cartilage. Am J Physiol 1993; 265: C497506. 45. Wiemann J, Fabbri M and Yang T-R et al. Fossilization transforms vertebrate hard tissue proteins into N-heterocyclic polymers. Nat Commun 2018; 9: 4741. 46. Schweitzer MH, Zheng W and Cleland TP et al. A role for iron and oxygen chemistry in preserving soft tissues, cells and molecules from deep time. Proc R Soc B 2014; 281: 20132741. 47. Lull R and Wright N. Hadrosaurian Dinosaurs of North America: Geological Society of America Special Papers No. 40. 1942. 48. Bailleul AM and Horner JR. Comparative histology of some craniofacial sutures and skull-base synchondroses in non-avian dinosaurs and their extant phylogenetic bracket. J Anat 2016; 229: 25285. 49. Lamm E-T. Preparation and sectioning of specimens. In: Padian K and Lamm E-T (eds.). Bone Histology of Fossil Tetrapods: Advancing Methods, Analysis, and Interpretation. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 2013, 55160. 50. Buss JL, Neuzil J and Gellert N et al. Pyridoxal isonicotinoyl hydrazone analogs induce apoptosis in hematopoietic cells due to their iron-chelating properties. Biochem Pharmacol 2003; 65: 16172.
Downloaded from https://academic.oup.com/nsr/article/7/4/815/5762999 by guest on 15 August 2024