The nervous systems of basally branching nemertea (palaeonemertea).

In recent years, a lot of studies have been published dealing with the anatomy of the nervous system in different spiralian species. The only nemertean species investigated in this context probably shows derived characters and thus the conditions found there are not useful in inferring the relations...

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Main Authors: Patrick Beckers, Rudi Loesel, Thomas Bartolomaeus
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3681988?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-45312329c97b4421b1b5b92d8dd0b1492020-11-25T01:19:56ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0186e6613710.1371/journal.pone.0066137The nervous systems of basally branching nemertea (palaeonemertea).Patrick BeckersRudi LoeselThomas BartolomaeusIn recent years, a lot of studies have been published dealing with the anatomy of the nervous system in different spiralian species. The only nemertean species investigated in this context probably shows derived characters and thus the conditions found there are not useful in inferring the relationship between nemerteans and other spiralian taxa. Ingroup relationships within Nemertea are still unclear, but there is some agreement that the palaeonemerteans form a basal, paraphyletic grade. Thus, palaeonemertean species are likely the most informative when comparing with other invertebrate groups. We therefore analyzed the nervous system of several palaeonemertean species by combining histology and immunostaining. 3D reconstructions based on the aligned slices were performed to get an overall impression of the central nervous system, and immunohistochemistry was chosen to reveal fine structures and to be able to compare the data with recently published results. The insights presented here permit a first attempt to reconstruct the primary organization of the nemertean nervous system. This comparative analysis allows substantiating homology hypotheses for nerves of the peripheral nervous system. This study also provides evidence that the nemertean brain primarily consists of two lobes connected by a strong ventral commissure and one to several dorsal commissures. During nemertean evolution, the brain underwent continuous compartmentalization into a pair of dorsal and ventral lobes interconnected by commissures and lateral tracts. Given that this conclusion can be corroborated by cladistic analyses, nemerteans should share a common ancestor with spiralians that primarily have a simple brain consisting of paired medullary, frontally commissurized and reinforced cords. Such an organization resembles the situation found in presumably basally branching annelids or mollusks.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3681988?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Patrick Beckers
Rudi Loesel
Thomas Bartolomaeus
spellingShingle Patrick Beckers
Rudi Loesel
Thomas Bartolomaeus
The nervous systems of basally branching nemertea (palaeonemertea).
PLoS ONE
author_facet Patrick Beckers
Rudi Loesel
Thomas Bartolomaeus
author_sort Patrick Beckers
title The nervous systems of basally branching nemertea (palaeonemertea).
title_short The nervous systems of basally branching nemertea (palaeonemertea).
title_full The nervous systems of basally branching nemertea (palaeonemertea).
title_fullStr The nervous systems of basally branching nemertea (palaeonemertea).
title_full_unstemmed The nervous systems of basally branching nemertea (palaeonemertea).
title_sort nervous systems of basally branching nemertea (palaeonemertea).
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description In recent years, a lot of studies have been published dealing with the anatomy of the nervous system in different spiralian species. The only nemertean species investigated in this context probably shows derived characters and thus the conditions found there are not useful in inferring the relationship between nemerteans and other spiralian taxa. Ingroup relationships within Nemertea are still unclear, but there is some agreement that the palaeonemerteans form a basal, paraphyletic grade. Thus, palaeonemertean species are likely the most informative when comparing with other invertebrate groups. We therefore analyzed the nervous system of several palaeonemertean species by combining histology and immunostaining. 3D reconstructions based on the aligned slices were performed to get an overall impression of the central nervous system, and immunohistochemistry was chosen to reveal fine structures and to be able to compare the data with recently published results. The insights presented here permit a first attempt to reconstruct the primary organization of the nemertean nervous system. This comparative analysis allows substantiating homology hypotheses for nerves of the peripheral nervous system. This study also provides evidence that the nemertean brain primarily consists of two lobes connected by a strong ventral commissure and one to several dorsal commissures. During nemertean evolution, the brain underwent continuous compartmentalization into a pair of dorsal and ventral lobes interconnected by commissures and lateral tracts. Given that this conclusion can be corroborated by cladistic analyses, nemerteans should share a common ancestor with spiralians that primarily have a simple brain consisting of paired medullary, frontally commissurized and reinforced cords. Such an organization resembles the situation found in presumably basally branching annelids or mollusks.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3681988?pdf=render
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