Waxman Hannah K, Muscedere Mario L, Traniello James F A
Undergraduate Program in Neuroscience, Boston University, Boston, MA, USA.
Brain Behav Evol. 2017;89(3):195-208. doi: 10.1159/000470899. Epub 2017 May 16.
Miniaturized nervous systems have been thought to limit behavioral ability, and animals with miniaturized brains may be less flexible when challenged by injuries resulting in sensory deficits that impact the development, maintenance, and plasticity of small-scale neural networks. We experimentally examined how injuries to sensory structures critical for olfactory ability affect behavioral performance in workers of the ant Pheidole dentata, which have minute brains (0.01 mm3) and primarily rely on the perception and processing of chemical signals and cues to direct their social behavior. We employed unilateral antennal denervation to decrease the olfactory perception ability of workers and quantified consequential neuroanatomical and behavioral performance effects. Postablation neuroanatomical metrics revealed a 25% reduction in the volume of the antennal lobe ipsilateral to the antennal lesion relative to the contralateral lobe, indicating atrophy of the input-deprived tissue. However, antennectomy did not affect the volumes of the mushroom body or its subcompartments or the number of mushroom body synaptic complexes (microglomeruli) in either brain hemisphere. Synapsin immunoreactivity, however, was significantly higher in the ipsilateral mushroom body calyces, which could reflect presynaptic potentiation and homeostatic compensation in higher-order olfactory regions. Despite tissue loss caused by antennal lesioning and resulting unilateral sensory deprivation, the ability of workers to perform behaviors that encompass the breadth of their task repertoire and meet demands for colony labor remained largely intact. The few behavioral deficits recorded were restricted to pheromone trail-following ability, a result that was expected due to the need for bilateral olfactory input to process spatial odor information. Our macroscopic and cellular neuroanatomical measurements and assessments of task performance demonstrate that the miniaturized brains of P. dentata workers and their sensorimotor functions are remarkably robust to injury-related size reduction and remain capable of generating behaviors required to respond appropriately to chemical social signals and effectively nurse immatures, as well as participate in coordinated foraging.
小型化的神经系统被认为会限制行为能力,而脑小型化的动物在受到导致感觉缺陷的损伤挑战时可能灵活性较差,这些损伤会影响小规模神经网络的发育、维持和可塑性。我们通过实验研究了对嗅觉能力至关重要的感觉结构损伤如何影响齿胸切叶蚁工蚁的行为表现,这种蚂蚁的脑极小(0.01立方毫米),主要依靠化学信号和线索的感知与处理来指导其社会行为。我们采用单侧触角去神经支配来降低工蚁的嗅觉感知能力,并量化由此产生的神经解剖学和行为表现影响。切除触角后的神经解剖学指标显示,与对侧叶相比,触角损伤同侧的触角叶体积减少了25%,表明输入剥夺组织出现萎缩。然而,切除触角并未影响任何一个脑半球中蘑菇体及其子区域的体积,也未影响蘑菇体突触复合体(微球)的数量。不过,同侧蘑菇体萼部的突触素免疫反应性显著更高,这可能反映了高阶嗅觉区域的突触前增强和稳态补偿。尽管触角损伤导致组织损失并造成单侧感觉剥夺,但工蚁执行涵盖其全部任务范围并满足蚁群劳动需求的行为能力在很大程度上仍保持完好。记录到的少数行为缺陷仅限于追踪信息素痕迹的能力,由于处理空间气味信息需要双侧嗅觉输入,这一结果在意料之中。我们对任务表现的宏观和细胞神经解剖学测量与评估表明,齿胸切叶蚁工蚁的小型化大脑及其感觉运动功能对与损伤相关的体积减小具有显著的鲁棒性,并且仍然能够产生对化学社会信号做出适当反应、有效照料幼虫以及参与协同觅食所需的行为。