Shibata Takashi, Hattori Noriaki, Nishijo Hisao, Kuroda Satoshi, Takakusaki Kaoru
Department of Neurosurgery, Toyama University Hospital, Toyama, Japan.
Department of Neurosurgery, Toyama Nishi General Hospital, Toyama, Japan.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2024 Nov 29;18:1482872. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2024.1482872. eCollection 2024.
The Earth's abundance of iron has played a crucial role in both generating its geomagnetic field and contributing to the development of early life. In ancient oceans, iron ions, particularly around deep-sea hydrothermal vents, might have catalyzed the formation of macromolecules, leading to the emergence of life and the Last Universal Common Ancestor. Iron continued to influence catalysis, metabolism, and molecular evolution, resulting in the creation of magnetosome gene clusters in magnetotactic bacteria, which enabled these unicellular organisms to detect geomagnetic field. Although humans lack a clearly identified organ for geomagnetic sensing, many life forms have adapted to geomagnetic field-even in deep-sea environments-through mechanisms beyond the conventional five senses. Research indicates that zebrafish hindbrains are sensitive to magnetic fields, the semicircular canals of pigeons respond to weak potential changes through electromagnetic induction, and human brainwaves respond to magnetic fields in darkness. This suggests that the trigeminal brainstem nucleus and vestibular nuclei, which integrate multimodal magnetic information, might play a role in geomagnetic processing. From iron-based metabolic systems to magnetic sensing in neurons, the evolution of life reflects ongoing adaptation to geomagnetic field. However, since magnetite-activated, torque-based ion channels within cell membranes have not yet been identified, specialized sensory structures like the semicircular canals might still be necessary for detecting geomagnetic orientation. This mini-review explores the evolution of life from Earth's formation to light-independent human magnetoreception, examining both the magnetite hypothesis and the electromagnetic induction hypothesis as potential mechanisms for human geomagnetic detection.
地球上丰富的铁元素在产生地磁场和促进早期生命发展方面都发挥了关键作用。在古代海洋中,铁离子,尤其是在深海热液喷口周围,可能催化了大分子的形成,从而导致生命和最后共同祖先的出现。铁元素继续影响催化、新陈代谢和分子进化,促使趋磁细菌中磁小体基因簇的产生,使这些单细胞生物能够检测地磁场。尽管人类缺乏一个明确的地磁感应器官,但许多生命形式已经通过超越传统五种感官的机制适应了地磁场,甚至在深海环境中也是如此。研究表明,斑马鱼的后脑对磁场敏感,鸽子的半规管通过电磁感应响应微弱的电位变化,而人脑电波在黑暗中对磁场有反应。这表明,整合多模态磁信息的三叉神经脑干核和前庭核可能在地磁处理中发挥作用。从基于铁的代谢系统到神经元中的磁感测,生命的进化反映了对地球磁场的持续适应。然而,由于细胞膜内尚未发现由磁铁矿激活的、基于扭矩的离子通道,像半规管这样的专门感觉结构可能仍然是检测地磁方向所必需的。这篇综述探讨了从地球形成到与光无关的人类磁感受的生命进化,研究了磁铁矿假说和电磁感应假说作为人类地磁检测潜在机制的情况。