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1.
J Comp Neurol ; 528(7): 1079-1094, 2020 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31621907

RESUMO

Mantis shrimps (Stomatopoda) possess in common with other crustaceans, and with Hexapoda, specific neuroanatomical attributes of the protocerebrum, the most anterior part of the arthropod brain. These attributes include assemblages of interconnected centers called the central body complex and in the lateral protocerebra, situated in the eyestalks, paired mushroom bodies. The phenotypic homologues of these centers across Panarthropoda support the view that ancestral integrative circuits crucial to action selection and memory have persisted since the early Cambrian or late Ediacaran. However, the discovery of another prominent integrative neuropil in the stomatopod lateral protocerebrum raises the question whether it is unique to Stomatopoda or at least most developed in this lineage, which may have originated in the upper Ordovician or early Devonian. Here, we describe the neuroanatomical structure of this center, called the reniform body. Using confocal microscopy and classical silver staining, we demonstrate that the reniform body receives inputs from multiple sources, including the optic lobe's lobula. Although the mushroom body also receives projections from the lobula, it is entirely distinct from the reniform body, albeit connected to it by discrete tracts. We discuss the implications of their coexistence in Stomatopoda, the occurrence of the reniform body in another eumalacostracan lineage and what this may mean for our understanding of brain functionality in Pancrustacea.


Assuntos
Braquiúros/anatomia & histologia , Encéfalo/anatomia & histologia , Neurópilo/citologia , Animais
2.
J Comp Neurol ; 526(7): 1148-1165, 2018 05 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29377111

RESUMO

Stomatopods have an elaborate visual system served by a retina that is unique to this class of pancrustaceans. Its upper and lower eye hemispheres encode luminance and linear polarization while an equatorial band of photoreceptors termed the midband detects color, circularly polarized light and linear polarization in the ultraviolet. In common with many malacostracan crustaceans, stomatopods have stalked eyes, but they can move these independently within three degrees of rotational freedom. Both eyes separately use saccadic and scanning movements but they can also move in a coordinated fashion to track selected targets or maintain a forward eyestalk posture during swimming. Visual information is initially processed in the first two optic neuropils, the lamina and the medulla, where the eye's midband is represented by enlarged regions within each neuropil that contain populations of neurons, the axons of which are segregated from the neuropil regions subtending the hemispheres. Neuronal channels representing the midband extend from the medulla to the lobula where populations of putative inhibitory glutamic acid decarboxylase-positive neurons and tyrosine hydroxylase-positive neurons intrinsic to the lobula have specific associations with the midband. Here we investigate the organization of the midband representation in the medulla and the lobula in the context of their overall architecture. We discuss the implications of observed arrangements, in which midband inputs to the lobula send out collaterals that extend across the retinotopic mosaic pertaining to the hemispheres. This organization suggests an integrative design that diverges from the eumalacostracan ground pattern and, for the stomatopod, enables color and polarization information to be integrated with luminance information that presumably encodes shape and motion.


Assuntos
Percepção de Cores/fisiologia , Crustáceos/anatomia & histologia , Neurônios/fisiologia , Lobo Óptico de Animais não Mamíferos/anatomia & histologia , Retina/citologia , Animais , Dextranos/metabolismo , Microscopia Eletrônica , Neurônios/ultraestrutura , Neurópilo/fisiologia , Lobo Óptico de Animais não Mamíferos/metabolismo , Células Fotorreceptoras , Coloração pela Prata , Sinapsinas/metabolismo , Tirosina 3-Mono-Oxigenase/metabolismo , Visão Ocular
3.
Elife ; 62017 09 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28949916

RESUMO

Mushroom bodies are the iconic learning and memory centers of insects. No previously described crustacean possesses a mushroom body as defined by strict morphological criteria although crustacean centers called hemiellipsoid bodies, which serve functions in sensory integration, have been viewed as evolutionarily convergent with mushroom bodies. Here, using key identifiers to characterize neural arrangements, we demonstrate insect-like mushroom bodies in stomatopod crustaceans (mantis shrimps). More than any other crustacean taxon, mantis shrimps display sophisticated behaviors relating to predation, spatial memory, and visual recognition comparable to those of insects. However, neuroanatomy-based cladistics suggesting close phylogenetic proximity of insects and stomatopod crustaceans conflicts with genomic evidence showing hexapods closely related to simple crustaceans called remipedes. We discuss whether corresponding anatomical phenotypes described here reflect the cerebral morphology of a common ancestor of Pancrustacea or an extraordinary example of convergent evolution.


Assuntos
Crustáceos/anatomia & histologia , Corpos Pedunculados/anatomia & histologia , Animais , Evolução Biológica , Encéfalo/anatomia & histologia
4.
C R Biol ; 333(5): 395-404, 2010 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20451881

RESUMO

East Antarctic octopods were identified by sequencing mtCOI and using four analytical approaches: Neighbor-joining by Kimura-2-Parameter-based distances, character-based, BLAST, and Bayesian Inference of Phylogeny. Although the distance-based analytical approaches identified a high proportion of the sequences (99.5% to genus and 88.1% to species level), these results are undermined by the absence of a clear gap between intra- and interspecific variation. The character-based approach gave highly conflicting results compared to the distance-based methods and failed to identify apomorphic characters for many of the species. While a DNA independent approach is necessary for validation of the method comparisons, crude morphological observations give early support to the distance-based results and indicate extensive range expansions of several species compared to previous studies. Furthermore, the use of distance-based phylogenetic methods nevertheless group specimens into plausible species clades that are highly useful in non-taxonomical or non-systematic studies.


Assuntos
Octopodiformes/genética , Animais , Regiões Antárticas , Sequência de Bases , Teorema de Bayes , Cefalópodes/genética , DNA/genética , Primers do DNA , Amplificação de Genes , Variação Genética , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Octopodiformes/classificação , Filogenia , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase , Especificidade da Espécie
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