Hale Melina E, Long John H, McHenry Matthew J, Westneat Mark W
Department of Organismal Biology and Anatomy, University of Chicago, Illinois 60637, USA.
Evolution. 2002 May;56(5):993-1007. doi: 10.1111/j.0014-3820.2002.tb01411.x.
The fast-start startle behavior is the primary mechanism of rapid escape in fishes and is a model system for examining neural circuit design and musculoskeletal function. To develop a dataset for evolutionary analysis of the startle response, the kinematics and muscle activity patterns of the fast-start were analyzed for four fish species at key branches in the phylogeny of vertebrates. Three of these species (Polypterus palmas, Lepisosteus osseus, and Amia calva) represent the base of the actinopterygian radiation. A fourth species (Oncorhynchus mykiss) provided data for a species in the central region of the teleost phylogeny. Using these data, we explored the evolution of this behavior within the phylogeny of vertebrates. To test the hypothesis that startle features are evolutionarily conservative, the variability of motor patterns and kinematics in fast-starts was described. Results show that the evolution of the startle behavior in fishes, and more broadly among vertebrates, is not conservative. The fast-start has undergone substantial change in suites of kinematics and electromyogram features, including the presence of either a one- or a two-stage kinematic response and change in the extent of bilateral muscle activity. Comparative methods were used to test the evolutionary hypothesis that changes in motor control are correlated with key differences in the kinematics and behavior of the fast-start. Significant evolutionary correlations were found between several motor pattern and behavioral characters. These results suggest that the startle neural circuit itself is not conservative. By tracing the evolution of motor pattern and kinematics on a phylogeny, it is shown that major changes in the neural circuit of the startle behavior occur at several levels in the phylogeny of vertebrates.
快速启动惊吓行为是鱼类快速逃避的主要机制,也是用于研究神经回路设计和肌肉骨骼功能的模型系统。为了开发用于惊吓反应进化分析的数据集,对脊椎动物系统发育关键分支上的四种鱼类的快速启动运动学和肌肉活动模式进行了分析。其中三种物种(多鳍鱼、雀鳝和弓鳍鱼)代表了辐鳍鱼辐射的基部。第四个物种(虹鳟)提供了硬骨鱼系统发育中部区域一个物种的数据。利用这些数据,我们探索了这种行为在脊椎动物系统发育中的进化。为了检验惊吓特征在进化上是保守的这一假设,描述了快速启动中运动模式和运动学的变异性。结果表明,鱼类以及更广泛地在脊椎动物中,惊吓行为的进化并非保守的。快速启动在运动学和肌电图特征组合方面发生了重大变化,包括存在单阶段或两阶段运动学反应以及双侧肌肉活动程度的变化。采用比较方法来检验运动控制的变化与快速启动的运动学和行为的关键差异相关的进化假设。在几个运动模式和行为特征之间发现了显著的进化相关性。这些结果表明惊吓神经回路本身并不保守。通过在系统发育树上追踪运动模式和运动学的进化,表明惊吓行为神经回路的主要变化发生在脊椎动物系统发育的几个层次上。