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How Jeremy the lonely snail showed that two lefts make a right

<span class="caption">Conventional "dextral" garden snail on left and "sinistral" Jeremy on right.</span> <span class="attribution"><span class="source">Angus Davison/University of Nottingham</span>, <span class="license">Author provided</span></span>
Conventional "dextral" garden snail on left and "sinistral" Jeremy on right. Angus Davison/University of Nottingham, Author provided

When I first started searching for a mate for a rare garden snail, I had no idea it would lead to a global media campaign, an internship at the BBC and a script for a graphic novel. Nor that it would connect me to citizen scientists around the world and the breeding of nearly 15,000 snails.

I had simply hoped that this snail whose shell coiled to the left instead of the usual right (nicknamed “Jeremy” after UK left-wing politician Jeremy Corbyn) would help communicate my previous research on the evolution and genetics of body asymmetry.

Although the scientist in me tried to remain disinterested throughout this saga, I am in the end delighted that there was a happy ending for both myself and the snail. My colleagues and I not only found a similar left-coiled snail for Jeremy to mate with, but also managed to learn from breeding the snails together that two lefts can make a right.

In work just published in Biology Letters, we showed that lefty shells in garden snails usually originate from an accident during early development, rather than an inherited condition. Jeremy’s offspring, grand-offspring and great-grand-offspring didn’t share his and his partner’s ultra-rare shell-coil.

Why did we need to find a mate for Jeremy? Although garden snails, Cornu aspersum, are hermaphrodite (both sexes at the same time), they prefer to mate with other snails. But Jeremy had not only a reverse-coiled shell but also genitals on the opposite side of the body to normal, making it very difficult to mate with most other snails.

Imagine trying to shake hands with someone who insists upon using their left hand while you use your right. It doesn’t work. A similar problem occurs in snails, which mate reciprocally in a side-by-side fashion. Mating only works if both snails have genitals on the same side of their head.

The tale of the lonely snail captured the public’s imagination – and changed my life. Jeremy’s plight crossed continents and multiple languages, taking the snail from compost heap anonymity to international “shellebrity”.

The unconventional love story (of a snail and his scientist) has even formed the basis for a graphic novel script. And my experience in the media led me to a British Science Association internship at the BBC.

<span class="caption">Jeremy (second from right) with his left-coiled potential mates.</span> <span class="attribution"><span class="source">Angus Davison/University of Nottingham</span>, <span class="license">Author provided</span></span>
Jeremy (second from right) with his left-coiled potential mates. Angus Davison/University of Nottingham, Author provided

A snail enthusiast and a snail farmer/restauranteur each found a lefty snail, both potential mates for Jeremy. But Jeremy was left shell-shocked after being rejected by both suitors, who seemed to prefer each other. Finally, shortly before Jeremy’s death in 2017, one mate produced a batch of 56 babies, about one-third of which were likely to be “fathered” by Jeremy.

Altogether, the publicity helped me discover more than 40 lefty snails that were found by citizen scientists, in the wild and from snail farms. Over three years, we hatched nearly 15,000 eggs from four generations of snails, including Jeremy.

These matings show that rare lefty garden snails are not usually produced due to an inherited condition, unlike in some other snails. Instead they are mainly produced by a developmental accident.

You could say that we tried to recreate what made Jeremy different, but this was not possible. Jeremy was special.

Asymmetry research

This finding has relevance to understanding the common factors that define organ and body asymmetry, including in humans, and the origin of rare reversed individuals in other animal groups.

In some snails, variation in the cell scaffolding gene – which is also present in humans and most other animals – determines whether shells coil to the left or right. It is likely that the same set of genes are involved in the setting up of the right and left sides of both snail and human bodies. Cell scaffolding genes may also be involved in determining behavioural handedness, including whether we write with our left or right hands.

Most snails are like us in that reversed body layouts are very rare. For example, very few humans have their heart on the right-hand side of the body as opposed to the usual left.

But a few species of snail more commonly vary in their asymmetry, yet we still don’t really know how they do it without health problems. In the long-term, understanding this may help reveal why humans are nearly always invariant. That could be Jeremy’s ultimate legacy.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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Angus Davison receives funding from the BBSRC. He is co-author of a planned graphic novel on "Jeremy the snail", for which he is represented by 3 Arts Entertainment, New York.