Department of Evolutionary Anthropology, Duke University, Durham, NC, 27708, USA.
Department of Evolutionary Anthropology, Duke University, Durham, NC, 27708, USA.
J Hum Evol. 2018 Jan;114:85-101. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2017.09.003. Epub 2017 Oct 31.
Supplying the central nervous system with oxygen and glucose for metabolic activities is a critical function for all animals at physiologic, anatomical, and behavioral levels. A relatively proximate challenge to nourishing the brain is maintaining adequate blood flow. Euarchontans (primates, dermopterans and treeshrews) display a diversity of solutions to this challenge. Although the vertebral artery is a major encephalic vessel, previous research has questioned its importance for irrigating the cerebrum. This presents a puzzling scenario for certain strepsirrhine primates (non-cheirogaleid lemuriforms) that have reduced promontorial branches of the internal carotid artery and no apparent alternative encephalic vascular route except for the vertebral artery. Here, we present results of phylogenetic comparative analyses of data on the cross-sectional area of bony canals that transmit the vertebral artery (transverse foramina). These results show that, across primates (and within major primate subgroups), variation in the transverse foramina helps significantly to explain variation in forebrain mass even when variation in promontorial canal cross-sectional areas are also considered. Furthermore, non-cheirogaleid lemuriforms have larger transverse foramina for their endocranial volume than other euarchontans, suggesting that the vertebral arteries compensate for reduced promontorial artery size. We also find that, among internal carotid-reliant euarchontans, species that are more encephalized tend to have a promontorial canal that is larger relative to the transverse foramina. Tentatively, we consider the correlation between arterial canal diameters (as a proxy for blood flow) and brain metabolic demands. The results of this analysis imply that human investment in brain metabolism (∼27% of basal metabolic rate) may not be exceptional among euarchontans.
为代谢活动向中枢神经系统供应氧气和葡萄糖是所有动物在生理、解剖和行为水平上的关键功能。为滋养大脑而面临的一个相对直接的挑战是保持足够的血流量。真兽类(灵长类动物、皮翼目动物和树鼩)在应对这一挑战方面表现出多样性的解决方案。尽管椎动脉是大脑的主要血管,但先前的研究对其为大脑灌注的重要性提出了质疑。对于某些食虫目灵长类动物(非原猴类灵长类动物)来说,这提出了一个令人困惑的情况,因为它们的颈内动脉岩骨支减少,除了椎动脉之外,似乎没有明显的其他脑内血管途径。在这里,我们展示了对椎动脉(横突孔)骨性管道横截面积数据进行系统发育比较分析的结果。这些结果表明,在灵长类动物中(以及在主要灵长类亚群内),横突孔的变异显著有助于解释大脑前部质量的变化,即使考虑到岩骨支管道横截面积的变异也是如此。此外,与其他真兽类动物相比,非原猴类灵长类动物的横突孔相对于其颅内容积更大,这表明椎动脉补偿了岩骨支动脉的减小。我们还发现,在依赖颈内动脉的真兽类动物中,脑化程度较高的物种其岩骨支相对横突孔更大。我们暂时认为,动脉管道直径(作为血流量的代理)与大脑代谢需求之间存在相关性。该分析的结果表明,人类在大脑代谢方面的投资(约占基础代谢率的 27%)在真兽类动物中可能并不例外。