Department of Genetics, Evolution and Environment, University College London, Darwin Building, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, UK.
Department of Life Sciences, Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, South Kensington, London SW7 5BD, UK.
Integr Comp Biol. 2021 Sep 8;61(2):337-351. doi: 10.1093/icb/icab103.
Free-swimming planktonic larvae are a key stage in the development of many marine phyla, and studies of these organisms have contributed to our understanding of major genetic and evolutionary processes. Although transitory, these larvae often attain a remarkable degree of tissue complexity, with well-defined musculature and nervous systems. Among the best studied are larvae belonging to the phylum Echinodermata, but with work largely focused on the pluteus larvae of sea urchins (class Echinoidea). The greatest diversity of larval strategies among echinoderms is found in the class Asteroidea (sea stars), organisms that are rapidly emerging as experimental systems for genetic and developmental studies. However, the bipinnaria larvae of sea stars have only been studied in detail in a small number of species and although they have been relatively well described neuro-anatomically, they are poorly understood neurochemically. Here, we have analyzed embryonic development and bipinnaria larval anatomy in the common North Atlantic sea star Asterias rubens, using a variety of staining methods in combination with confocal microscopy. Importantly, the chemical complexity of the nervous system of bipinnaria larvae was revealed through use of a diverse set of antibodies, with identification of at least three centers of differing neurochemical signature within the previously described nervous system: the anterior apical organ, oral region, and ciliary bands. Furthermore, the anatomy of the musculature and sites of cell division in bipinnaria larvae was analyzed. Comparisons of developmental progression and molecular anatomy across the Echinodermata provided a basis for hypotheses on the shared evolutionary and developmental processes that have shaped this group of animals. We conclude that bipinnaria larvae appear to be remarkably conserved across ∼200 million years of evolutionary time and may represent a strong evolutionary and/or developmental constraint on species utilizing this larval strategy.
自由游动的浮游幼虫是许多海洋门的关键发育阶段,对这些生物的研究有助于我们理解主要的遗传和进化过程。尽管这些幼虫是短暂的,但它们通常具有显著的组织复杂性,具有明确的肌肉和神经系统。研究最多的是属于棘皮动物门的幼虫,但主要集中在海胆(棘皮动物类)的浮游幼虫上。棘皮动物中幼虫策略的最大多样性存在于海星类(海星)中,这些生物正在迅速成为遗传和发育研究的实验系统。然而,海星的幼虫策略在很大程度上只在少数物种中进行了详细研究,尽管它们在神经解剖学上已经得到了相对较好的描述,但在神经化学方面却知之甚少。在这里,我们使用各种染色方法结合共聚焦显微镜,分析了常见北大西洋海星 Asterias rubens 的胚胎发育和双瓣幼虫的解剖结构。重要的是,通过使用一系列不同的抗体,揭示了双瓣幼虫神经系统的化学复杂性,鉴定出了以前描述的神经系统中至少三个具有不同神经化学特征的中心:前顶器官、口腔区域和纤毛带。此外,还分析了双瓣幼虫肌肉系统和细胞分裂部位的解剖结构。对棘皮动物门的发育进展和分子解剖结构的比较为共同的进化和发育过程的假设提供了基础,这些过程塑造了这群动物。我们的结论是,双瓣幼虫在大约 2 亿年的进化时间里似乎惊人地保守,可能代表了利用这种幼虫策略的物种的强大进化和/或发育约束。