Farris Sarah M
Department of Biology, West Virginia University, 3139 Life Sciences Building, 53 Campus Drive, Morgantown, WV 26505, USA
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2015 Dec 19;370(1684). doi: 10.1098/rstb.2015.0054.
Large, complex brains have evolved independently in several lineages of protostomes and deuterostomes. Sensory centres in the brain increase in size and complexity in proportion to the importance of a particular sensory modality, yet often share circuit architecture because of constraints in processing sensory inputs. The selective pressures driving enlargement of higher, integrative brain centres has been more difficult to determine, and may differ across taxa. The capacity for flexible, innovative behaviours, including learning and memory and other cognitive abilities, is commonly observed in animals with large higher brain centres. Other factors, such as social grouping and interaction, appear to be important in a more limited range of taxa, while the importance of spatial learning may be a common feature in insects with large higher brain centres. Despite differences in the exact behaviours under selection, evolutionary increases in brain size tend to derive from common modifications in development and generate common architectural features, even when comparing widely divergent groups such as vertebrates and insects. These similarities may in part be influenced by the deep homology of the brains of all Bilateria, in which shared patterns of developmental gene expression give rise to positionally, and perhaps functionally, homologous domains. Other shared modifications of development appear to be the result of homoplasy, such as the repeated, independent expansion of neuroblast numbers through changes in genes regulating cell division. The common features of large brains in so many groups of animals suggest that given their common ancestry, a limited set of mechanisms exist for increasing structural and functional diversity, resulting in many instances of homoplasy in bilaterian nervous systems.
大型复杂的大脑已在原口动物和后口动物的多个谱系中独立进化。大脑中的感觉中枢会根据特定感觉方式的重要性按比例增大其大小和复杂性,但由于处理感觉输入时存在限制,它们通常共享电路结构。驱动更高层次的整合性大脑中枢扩大的选择压力更难确定,并且可能因分类群而异。具有灵活、创新行为的能力,包括学习、记忆和其他认知能力,通常在具有大型高级大脑中枢的动物中观察到。其他因素,如社会群体和互动,在范围更有限的分类群中似乎很重要,而空间学习的重要性可能是具有大型高级大脑中枢的昆虫的一个共同特征。尽管在选择的具体行为上存在差异,但大脑大小的进化增加往往源于发育过程中的共同变化,并产生共同的结构特征,即使在比较脊椎动物和昆虫等差异很大的群体时也是如此。这些相似性可能部分受到所有两侧对称动物大脑深度同源性的影响,其中发育基因表达的共同模式产生了位置上甚至功能上同源的区域。其他发育上的共同变化似乎是趋同进化的结果,例如通过调节细胞分裂的基因变化,神经母细胞数量的反复、独立增加。如此多动物群体中大脑的共同特征表明,鉴于它们的共同祖先,存在一组有限的机制来增加结构和功能多样性,从而在两侧对称动物的神经系统中导致许多趋同进化的实例。