Karten Harvey J
Department of Neurosciences, University of California San Diego, San Diego, CA, USA
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2015 Dec 19;370(1684). doi: 10.1098/rstb.2015.0060.
The organization of the non-mammalian forebrain had long puzzled neurobiologists. Unlike typical mammalian brains, the telencephalon is not organized in a laminated 'cortical' manner, with distinct cortical areas dedicated to individual sensory modalities or motor functions. The two major regions of the telencephalon, the basal ventricular ridge (BVR) and the dorsal ventricular ridge (DVR), were loosely referred to as being akin to the mammalian basal ganglia. The telencephalon of non-mammalian vertebrates appears to consist of multiple 'subcortical' groups of cells. Analysis of the nuclear organization of the avian brain, its connections, molecular properties and physiology, and organization of its pattern of circuitry and function relative to that of mammals, collectively referred to as 'evolutionary connectomics', revealed that only a restricted portion of the BVR is homologous to the basal ganglia of mammals. The remaining dorsal regions of the DVR, wulst and arcopallium of the avian brain contain telencephalic inputs and outputs remarkably similar to those of the individual layers of the mammalian 'neocortex', hippocampus and amygdala, with instances of internuclear connections strikingly similar to those found between cortical layers and within radial 'columns' in the mammalian sensory and motor cortices. The molecular properties of these 'nuclei' in birds and reptiles are similar to those of the corresponding layers of the mammalian neocortex. The fundamental pathways and cell groups of the auditory, visual and somatosensory systems of the thalamus and telencephalon are homologous at the cellular, circuit, network and gene levels, and are of great antiquity. A proposed altered migration of these homologous neurons and circuits during development is offered as a mechanism that may account for the altered configuration of mammalian telencephalae.
非哺乳动物前脑的组织结构长期以来一直困扰着神经生物学家。与典型的哺乳动物大脑不同,端脑并非以分层的“皮质”方式组织,没有专门用于个别感觉模态或运动功能的不同皮质区域。端脑的两个主要区域,即基底脑室嵴(BVR)和背侧脑室嵴(DVR),被宽泛地认为类似于哺乳动物的基底神经节。非哺乳动物脊椎动物的端脑似乎由多个“皮质下”细胞群组成。对鸟类大脑的核组织、其连接、分子特性和生理学,以及其相对于哺乳动物的电路模式和功能组织进行分析,统称为“进化连接组学”,结果表明,只有BVR的有限部分与哺乳动物的基底神经节同源。鸟类大脑DVR的其余背侧区域、厚皮质和弓状皮质包含与哺乳动物“新皮质”、海马体和杏仁核各层的端脑输入和输出非常相似的结构,其核间连接的实例与在哺乳动物感觉和运动皮质的皮质层之间以及径向“柱”内发现的连接惊人地相似。鸟类和爬行动物中这些“核”的分子特性与哺乳动物新皮质相应层的分子特性相似。丘脑和端脑的听觉、视觉和体感系统的基本通路和细胞群在细胞、电路、网络和基因水平上是同源的,并且非常古老。有人提出,这些同源神经元和电路在发育过程中迁移方式的改变是一种机制,可能解释了哺乳动物端脑结构的改变。