Animal Biodiversity and Evolution, University of Goettingen, Untere Karspüle 2, 37073, Goettingen, Germany.
School of Biological Sciences, University of Bristol, Life Sciences Building, 24 Tyndall Avenue, Bristol, BS8 1TQ, UK.
BMC Evol Biol. 2018 Oct 4;18(1):149. doi: 10.1186/s12862-018-1263-5.
Sabellarids, also known as honeycomb or sandcastle worms, when building their tubes, produce chemical signals (free fatty acids) that are responsible for larval settlement and the formation of three-dimensional aggregations. The larval palps and the dorsal hump (becoming the median organ in adults) are presumed to participate in such a substrate selection during settlement. Notably, the sabellariid median organ is an apparently unique organ among annelids that has been attributed with a sensory function and perhaps with some affinities to the nuchal organs of other polychaetes. Nevertheless, detailed investigations of this prominent character complex including ultrastructural examinations are lacking so far.
Our comprehensive investigations provide data about the anterior sensory organs in Sabellariidae and inform about their transformation during pelagic larval development. We used a comparative approach including immunostaining with subsequent confocal laser scanning microscopy (clsm), histological sections as well as electron microscopy in a range of larval and adult stages of two sabellariid species. We find that the neuronal innervation as well as the ultrastructure of the sabellariid ciliary structures along the median organ are highly comparable with that of nuchal organs known from other polychaetes. Furthermore, the myoinhibitory protein (MIP) - a protein known to be also involved into chemo-sensation - was detected in the region of the larval median organ. Moreover, we reveal the presence of an unusual type of photoreceptor as part of the median organ in Idanthyrsus australiensis with a corrugated sensory membrane ultrastructure unlike those observed in the segmental ocelli of other polychaetes.
We are describing for the first time the nuchal organ-like structures in different developmental stages of two species of Sabellariidae. The external morphology, neuronal innervation, developmental fate and ultrastructure of the newly-discovered median organ-based ciliary pits are comparable with the characteristics known for annelid nuchal organs and therefore indicate a homology of both sensory complexes. The presence of myoinhibitory peptide (MIP) in the respective region supports such a hypothesis and exhibits the possibility of an involvement of the entire sabellariid median organ complex, and in particular the prominent ciliated pits, in chemo-sensation.
沙蚕,也被称为蜂窝或沙堡虫,在建造管时会产生化学信号(游离脂肪酸),这些信号负责幼虫定殖和三维聚集的形成。幼虫的触须和背隆(在成体中成为中肠器官)被认为在定殖过程中参与了这种基质选择。值得注意的是,沙蚕类中肠器官是环节动物中一种明显独特的器官,它具有感觉功能,也许与其他多毛类的颈器有一些亲缘关系。然而,迄今为止,对包括超微结构检查在内的这个突出的特征复合体还缺乏详细的研究。
我们的综合研究提供了沙蚕科前部感觉器官的数据,并介绍了它们在浮游幼虫发育过程中的转化。我们使用了一种比较方法,包括免疫染色,随后进行共聚焦激光扫描显微镜(clsm)、组织切片和电子显微镜检查,涉及两种沙蚕类物种的幼虫和成虫阶段。我们发现,中肠器官的神经支配以及纤毛结构的超微结构与其他多毛类的颈器非常相似。此外,我们还在幼虫中肠器官区域检测到了一种已知参与化学感觉的肌抑制蛋白(MIP)。此外,我们还揭示了在澳大利亚 Idanthyrsus 中肠器官作为一部分存在一种不寻常类型的光感受器,其波纹感觉膜超微结构与其他多毛类的节段眼不同。
我们首次描述了两种沙蚕科物种不同发育阶段的颈器样结构。新发现的基于中肠器官的纤毛凹陷的外部形态、神经支配、发育命运和超微结构与已知环节动物颈器的特征相似,因此表明这两个感觉复合体具有同源性。在相应区域存在肌抑制肽(MIP)支持了这样的假设,并表明整个沙蚕类中肠器官复合体,特别是突出的纤毛凹陷,可能参与了化学感觉。