INTRODUCTION: From the large-brained cephalopods to the acephalic bivalves, molluscs show a vast range of nervous system centralization patterns. Despite this diversity, molluscan nervous systems, broadly considered, are organized either as medullary cords, as seen in chitons, or as ganglia, which are typical of gastropods and bivalves. The cephalopod brain is exceptional not just in terms of its size; its relationship to a molluscan cordal or ganglionic plan has not been resolved from the study of its compacted adult structure. One approach to clarifying this puzzle is to investigate the patterns of early cephalopod brain neurogenesis, where molecular markers for cephalopod neural development may be informative. RESULTS: We report here on early brain pattern formation in the California two-spot octopus, Octopus bimaculoides. Employing gene expression analysis with the pan-bilaterian neuronal marker ELAV and the atonal-related neuronal differentiation genes NEUROGENIN and NEUROD, as well as immunostaining using a Distalless-like homeoprotein antibody, we found that the octopus central brain forms from concentric cords rather than bilaterally distributed pairs of ganglia. CONCLUSION: We conclude that the cephalopod brain, despite its great size and elaborate specializations, retains in its development the hypothesized ancestral molluscan nervous system plan of medullary cords, as described for chitons and other aculiferan molluscs.
Evidence for a cordal, not ganglionic, pattern of cephalopod brain neurogenesis.
证据表明头足类动物脑神经发生是脊髓型而非神经节型的
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作者:Shigeno Shuichi, Parnaik Rahul, Albertin Caroline B, Ragsdale Clifton W
| 期刊: | Zoological Letters | 影响因子: | 2.100 |
| 时间: | 2015 | 起止号: | 2015 Sep 7; 1:26 |
| doi: | 10.1186/s40851-015-0026-z | 研究方向: | 神经科学 |
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