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Comparative neuroanatomy suggests repeated reduction of neuroarchitectural complexity in Annelida

BACKGROUND: Paired mushroom bodies, an unpaired central complex, and bilaterally arranged clusters of olfactory glomeruli are among the most distinctive components of arthropod neuroarchitecture. Mushroom body neuropils, unpaired midline neuropils, and olfactory glomeruli also occur in the brains of...

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Autores principales: Heuer, Carsten M, Müller, Carsten HG, Todt, Christiane, Loesel, Rudi
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2874545/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20441583
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-9994-7-13
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author Heuer, Carsten M
Müller, Carsten HG
Todt, Christiane
Loesel, Rudi
author_facet Heuer, Carsten M
Müller, Carsten HG
Todt, Christiane
Loesel, Rudi
author_sort Heuer, Carsten M
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Paired mushroom bodies, an unpaired central complex, and bilaterally arranged clusters of olfactory glomeruli are among the most distinctive components of arthropod neuroarchitecture. Mushroom body neuropils, unpaired midline neuropils, and olfactory glomeruli also occur in the brains of some polychaete annelids, showing varying degrees of morphological similarity to their arthropod counterparts. Attempts to elucidate the evolutionary origin of these neuropils and to deduce an ancestral ground pattern of annelid cerebral complexity are impeded by the incomplete knowledge of annelid phylogeny and by a lack of comparative neuroanatomical data for this group. The present account aims to provide new morphological data for a broad range of annelid taxa in order to trace the occurrence and variability of higher brain centers in segmented worms. RESULTS: Immunohistochemically stained preparations provide comparative neuroanatomical data for representatives from 22 annelid species. The most prominent neuropil structures to be encountered in the annelid brain are the paired mushroom bodies that occur in a number of polychaete taxa. Mushroom bodies can in some cases be demonstrated to be closely associated with clusters of spheroid neuropils reminiscent of arthropod olfactory glomeruli. Less distinctive subcompartments of the annelid brain are unpaired midline neuropils that bear a remote resemblance to similar components in the arthropod brain. The occurrence of higher brain centers such as mushroom bodies, olfactory glomeruli, and unpaired midline neuropils seems to be restricted to errant polychaetes. CONCLUSIONS: The implications of an assumed homology between annelid and arthropod mushroom bodies are discussed in light of the 'new animal phylogeny'. It is concluded that the apparent homology of mushroom bodies in distantly related groups has to be interpreted as a plesiomorphy, pointing towards a considerably complex neuroarchitecture inherited from the last common ancestor, Urbilateria. Within the annelid radiation, the lack of mushroom bodies in certain groups is explained by widespread secondary reductions owing to selective pressures unfavorable for the differentiation of elaborate brains. Evolutionary pathways of mushroom body neuropils in errant polychaetes remain enigmatic.
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spelling pubmed-28745452010-05-22 Comparative neuroanatomy suggests repeated reduction of neuroarchitectural complexity in Annelida Heuer, Carsten M Müller, Carsten HG Todt, Christiane Loesel, Rudi Front Zool Research BACKGROUND: Paired mushroom bodies, an unpaired central complex, and bilaterally arranged clusters of olfactory glomeruli are among the most distinctive components of arthropod neuroarchitecture. Mushroom body neuropils, unpaired midline neuropils, and olfactory glomeruli also occur in the brains of some polychaete annelids, showing varying degrees of morphological similarity to their arthropod counterparts. Attempts to elucidate the evolutionary origin of these neuropils and to deduce an ancestral ground pattern of annelid cerebral complexity are impeded by the incomplete knowledge of annelid phylogeny and by a lack of comparative neuroanatomical data for this group. The present account aims to provide new morphological data for a broad range of annelid taxa in order to trace the occurrence and variability of higher brain centers in segmented worms. RESULTS: Immunohistochemically stained preparations provide comparative neuroanatomical data for representatives from 22 annelid species. The most prominent neuropil structures to be encountered in the annelid brain are the paired mushroom bodies that occur in a number of polychaete taxa. Mushroom bodies can in some cases be demonstrated to be closely associated with clusters of spheroid neuropils reminiscent of arthropod olfactory glomeruli. Less distinctive subcompartments of the annelid brain are unpaired midline neuropils that bear a remote resemblance to similar components in the arthropod brain. The occurrence of higher brain centers such as mushroom bodies, olfactory glomeruli, and unpaired midline neuropils seems to be restricted to errant polychaetes. CONCLUSIONS: The implications of an assumed homology between annelid and arthropod mushroom bodies are discussed in light of the 'new animal phylogeny'. It is concluded that the apparent homology of mushroom bodies in distantly related groups has to be interpreted as a plesiomorphy, pointing towards a considerably complex neuroarchitecture inherited from the last common ancestor, Urbilateria. Within the annelid radiation, the lack of mushroom bodies in certain groups is explained by widespread secondary reductions owing to selective pressures unfavorable for the differentiation of elaborate brains. Evolutionary pathways of mushroom body neuropils in errant polychaetes remain enigmatic. BioMed Central 2010-05-04 /pmc/articles/PMC2874545/ /pubmed/20441583 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-9994-7-13 Text en Copyright ©2010 Heuer et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Heuer, Carsten M
Müller, Carsten HG
Todt, Christiane
Loesel, Rudi
Comparative neuroanatomy suggests repeated reduction of neuroarchitectural complexity in Annelida
title Comparative neuroanatomy suggests repeated reduction of neuroarchitectural complexity in Annelida
title_full Comparative neuroanatomy suggests repeated reduction of neuroarchitectural complexity in Annelida
title_fullStr Comparative neuroanatomy suggests repeated reduction of neuroarchitectural complexity in Annelida
title_full_unstemmed Comparative neuroanatomy suggests repeated reduction of neuroarchitectural complexity in Annelida
title_short Comparative neuroanatomy suggests repeated reduction of neuroarchitectural complexity in Annelida
title_sort comparative neuroanatomy suggests repeated reduction of neuroarchitectural complexity in annelida
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2874545/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20441583
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1742-9994-7-13
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