Raghanti Mary Ann, Spurlock Linda B, Treichler F Robert, Weigel Sara E, Stimmelmayr Raphaela, Butti Camilla, Thewissen J G M Hans, Hof Patrick R
Department of Anthropology and School of Biomedical Sciences, Kent State University, 750 Hilltop Drive, 222 Lowry Hall, Kent, OH, 44242, USA,
Brain Struct Funct. 2015 Jul;220(4):2303-14. doi: 10.1007/s00429-014-0792-y. Epub 2014 May 23.
Von Economo neurons (VENs) are specialized projection neurons with a characteristic spindle-shaped soma and thick basal and apical dendrites. VENs have been described in restricted cortical regions, with their most frequent appearance in layers III and V of the anterior cingulate cortex, anterior insula, and frontopolar cortex of humans, great apes, macaque monkeys, elephants, and some cetaceans. Recently, a ubiquitous distribution of VENs was reported in various cortical areas in the pygmy hippopotamus, one of the closest living relatives of cetaceans. That finding suggested that VENs might not be unique to only a few species that possess enlarged brains. In the present analysis, we assessed the phylogenetic distribution of VENs within species representative of the superordinal clade that includes cetartiodactyls and perissodactyls, as well as afrotherians. In addition, the distribution of fork cells that are often found in close proximity to VENs was also assessed. Nissl-stained sections from the frontal pole, anterior cingulate cortex, anterior insula, and occipital pole of bowhead whale, cow, sheep, deer, horse, pig, rock hyrax, and human were examined using stereologic methods to quantify VENs and fork cells within layer V of all four cortical regions. VENs and fork cells were found in each of the species examined here with species-specific differences in distributions and densities. The present results demonstrated that VENs and fork cells were not restricted to highly encephalized or socially complex species, and their repeated emergence among distantly related species seems to represent convergent evolution of specialized pyramidal neurons. The widespread phylogenetic presence of VENs and fork cells indicates that these neuron morphologies readily emerged in response to selective forces,whose variety and nature are yet to be identified.
冯·埃科诺莫神经元(VENs)是一种特殊的投射神经元,具有独特的纺锤形胞体以及粗大的基底树突和顶端树突。VENs已在特定的皮质区域被描述,在人类、大猩猩、猕猴、大象和一些鲸类动物的前扣带回皮质、前岛叶皮质和额极皮质的第III层和第V层中出现最为频繁。最近,有报道称在侏儒河马(鲸类现存最近的近亲之一)的各个皮质区域中,VENs分布广泛。这一发现表明,VENs可能并非仅存在于少数脑容量较大的物种中。在本分析中,我们评估了VENs在包括偶蹄目和奇蹄目以及非洲兽总目的超目类群代表性物种中的系统发育分布。此外,还评估了经常在VENs附近发现的叉状细胞的分布情况。使用体视学方法检查了弓头鲸、牛、羊、鹿、马、猪、岩蹄兔和人类的额极、前扣带回皮质、前岛叶皮质和枕极的尼氏染色切片,以量化所有四个皮质区域第V层内的VENs和叉状细胞。在所研究的每个物种中都发现了VENs和叉状细胞,其分布和密度存在物种特异性差异。目前的结果表明,VENs和叉状细胞并不局限于脑容量大或社会行为复杂的物种,它们在远缘物种中的反复出现似乎代表了特殊锥体神经元的趋同进化。VENs和叉状细胞在系统发育中的广泛存在表明,这些神经元形态很容易因尚未确定的选择力而出现。