Harrison Jon F
School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287-4501, USA
Integr Comp Biol. 2015 Nov;55(5):802-15. doi: 10.1093/icb/icv055. Epub 2015 May 22.
The handling and use of oxygen are central to physiological function of all pancrustaceans. Throughout the Pancrustacea, ventilation is controlled by a central oxygen-sensitive pattern generator. The ancestral condition was likely to achieve ventilation of the gills via leg-associated or mouth-associated muscles, but in insects and some air-breathing crustaceans, new muscles were recruited for this purpose, including intersegmental muscles likely used previously for posture and locomotion. Many aspects of the sensing of oxygen and the occurrence of responses to hypoxia (increased ventilation, depressed growth and metabolic rate, developmental changes that enhance the delivery of oxygen) appear common across most pancrustaceans, but there is tremendous variation across species. Some of this can be explained by habitat (e.g., ventilation of the internal medium occurs in terrestrial species and of the external medium in aquatic species; rearing under hypoxia induces tracheal proliferation in terrestrial insects and hemocyanin production in aquatic crustaceans); some plausibly by evolutionary origin of some responses to hypoxia within the Pancrustacea (the most basal arthropods may lack a ventilatory response to hypoxia); and some by the availability of environmental oxygen (animals adapted to survive hypoxia turn on the response to hypoxia at a lower PO2). On average, crustaceans and insects have similar tolerances to prolonged anoxia, but species or life stages from habitats with a danger of being trapped in hypoxia can tolerate longer durations of anoxia. Lactate is the primary anaerobic end-product in crustaceans but some insects have evolved a more diverse array of anaerobic end-products, including ethanol, alanine, succinate, and acetate. Most clades of Pancrustacea are small and lack obvious respiratory structures. Gilled stem-pancrustaceans likely evolved in the Cambrian, and gills persist in large Ostracoda, Malacostraca, and Branchiopoda. Based on currently accepted phylogenies, invaginations of cuticle to form lungs or tracheae occurred independently multiple times across the Arthropoda and Pancrustacea in association with the evolution of terrestriality. However, the timing and number of such events in the evolution of tracheal systems remain controversial. Despite molecular phylogenies that place the origin of the hexapods before the appearance of land plants in the Ordovician, terrestrial fossils of Collembola, Archaeognatha, and Zygentoma in the Silurian and Devonian, and the lack of fossil evidence for older aquatic hexapods, suggest that the tracheated hexapods likely evolved from Remipedia-like ancestors on land.
氧气的处理和利用对于所有泛甲壳动物的生理功能至关重要。在整个泛甲壳动物中,通气由一个对氧气敏感的中央模式发生器控制。其原始状态可能是通过与腿部或口部相关的肌肉实现鳃的通气,但在昆虫和一些呼吸空气的甲壳动物中,为此招募了新的肌肉,包括可能先前用于姿势和运动的节间肌肉。在大多数泛甲壳动物中,氧气感知和对缺氧的反应(通气增加、生长和代谢率降低、增强氧气输送的发育变化)的许多方面似乎是常见的,但物种之间存在巨大差异。其中一些可以用栖息地来解释(例如,陆生物种中内部介质的通气,水生物种中外在介质的通气;在缺氧条件下饲养会诱导陆生昆虫的气管增殖和水生甲壳动物的血蓝蛋白产生);一些可能是由于泛甲壳动物中对缺氧的某些反应的进化起源(最基础的节肢动物可能缺乏对缺氧的通气反应);还有一些是由于环境氧气的可用性(适应在缺氧环境中生存的动物在较低的氧分压下开启对缺氧的反应)。平均而言,甲壳动物和昆虫对长时间缺氧具有相似的耐受性,但来自有被困在缺氧危险栖息地的物种或生命阶段能够耐受更长时间的缺氧。乳酸是甲壳动物中主要的厌氧终产物,但一些昆虫进化出了更多样化的厌氧终产物,包括乙醇、丙氨酸、琥珀酸和乙酸。大多数泛甲壳动物类群体型较小且缺乏明显的呼吸结构。有鳃的茎部泛甲壳动物可能在寒武纪进化而来,鳃在大型介形纲、软甲纲和鳃足纲中仍然存在。根据目前被接受的系统发育树,与陆生进化相关,角质层内陷形成肺或气管在节肢动物和泛甲壳动物中独立发生了多次。然而,气管系统进化过程中此类事件的时间和数量仍存在争议。尽管分子系统发育表明六足动物的起源早于奥陶纪陆地植物的出现,但志留纪和泥盆纪的弹尾目、石蛃目和衣鱼目的陆生化石,以及缺乏更古老的水生六足动物的化石证据,表明有气管的六足动物可能是从类似盲虾目的陆地祖先进化而来的。