Animal Evolution and Development, Institute of Biology, University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany.
PLoS One. 2013;8(3):e59090. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0059090. Epub 2013 Mar 13.
While recent neuroanatomical and gene expression studies have clarified the alignment of cephalic segments in arthropods and onychophorans, the identity of head segments in tardigrades remains controversial. In particular, it is unclear whether the tardigrade head and its enclosed brain comprises one, or several segments, or a non-segmental structure. To clarify this, we applied a variety of histochemical and immunocytochemical markers to specimens of the tardigrade Macrobiotus cf. harmsworthi and the onychophoran Euperipatoides rowelli.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Our immunolabelling against serotonin, FMRFamide and α-tubulin reveals that the tardigrade brain is a dorsal, bilaterally symmetric structure that resembles the brain of onychophorans and arthropods rather than a circumoesophageal ring typical of cycloneuralians (nematodes and allies). A suboesophageal ganglion is clearly lacking. Our data further reveal a hitherto unknown, unpaired stomatogastric ganglion in Macrobiotus cf. harmsworthi, which innervates the ectodermal oesophagus and the endodermal midgut and is associated with the second leg-bearing segment. In contrast, the oesophagus of the onychophoran E. rowelli possesses no immunoreactive neurons, whereas scattered bipolar, serotonin-like immunoreactive cell bodies are found in the midgut wall. Furthermore, our results show that the onychophoran pharynx is innervated by a medullary loop nerve accompanied by monopolar, serotonin-like immunoreactive cell bodies.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: A comparison of the nervous system innervating the foregut and midgut structures in tardigrades and onychophorans to that of arthropods indicates that the stomatogastric ganglion is a potential synapomorphy of Tardigrada and Arthropoda. Its association with the second leg-bearing segment in tardigrades suggests that the second trunk ganglion is a homologue of the arthropod tritocerebrum, whereas the first ganglion corresponds to the deutocerebrum. We therefore conclude that the tardigrade brain consists of a single segmental region corresponding to the arthropod protocerebrum and, accordingly, that the tardigrade head is a non-composite, one-segmented structure.
尽管最近的神经解剖学和基因表达研究已经阐明了节肢动物和有爪动物的头部分节排列,但缓步动物的头部节段的身份仍然存在争议。特别是,缓步动物的头部及其包含的大脑是一个、几个节段还是非节段结构尚不清楚。为了澄清这一点,我们应用了各种组织化学和免疫细胞化学标记物来研究缓步动物 Macrobiotus cf. harmsworthi 和有爪动物 Euperipatoides rowelli 的标本。
方法/主要发现:我们针对血清素、FMRFamide 和 α-微管蛋白的免疫标记表明,缓步动物的大脑是一个背侧、双侧对称的结构,类似于有爪动物和节肢动物的大脑,而不是典型的轮虫环(线虫及其近亲)。明显缺乏食管下神经节。我们的数据进一步揭示了在 Macrobiotus cf. harmsworthi 中一个以前未知的、不成对的咀嚼胃神经节,它支配外胚层食管和内胚层中肠,并与第二个带腿的节段相关。相比之下,有爪动物 E. rowelli 的食管没有免疫反应性神经元,而在中肠壁中发现了散在的双极、血清素样免疫反应性细胞体。此外,我们的结果表明,有爪动物的咽由一个髓质环神经支配,伴随着单极、血清素样免疫反应性细胞体。
结论/意义:比较缓步动物和有爪动物前肠和中肠结构的神经系统与节肢动物的神经系统表明,咀嚼胃神经节是缓步动物和节肢动物的潜在同源特征。它与缓步动物的第二个带腿节段的关联表明,第二个胸神经节是节肢动物的原脑的同源物,而第一个神经节对应于后脑。因此,我们得出结论,缓步动物的大脑由一个对应于节肢动物原脑的单个节段区域组成,因此,缓步动物的头部是一个非组合的、单一的结构。