Central projections from Johnston's organ in the locust: Axogenesis and brain neuroarchitecture.

IF 0.8 3区 生物学 Q4 CELL BIOLOGY
Development Genes and Evolution Pub Date : 2023-12-01 Epub Date: 2023-09-11 DOI:10.1007/s00427-023-00710-0
George Boyan, Leslie Williams, Erica Ehrhardt
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Johnston's organ (Jo) acts as an antennal wind-sensitive and/or auditory organ across a spectrum of insect species and its axons universally project to the brain. In the locust, this pathway is already present at mid-embryogenesis but the process of fasciculation involved in its construction has not been investigated. Terminal projections into the fine neuropilar organization of the brain also remain unresolved, information essential not only for understanding the neural circuitry mediating Jo-mediated behavior but also for providing comparative data offering insights into its evolution. In our study here, we employ neuron-specific, axon-specific, and epithelial domain labels to show that the pathway to the brain of the locust is built in a stepwise manner during early embryogenesis as processes from Jo cell clusters in the pedicel fasciculate first with one another, and then with the two tracts constituting the pioneer axon scaffold of the antenna. A comparison of fasciculation patterns confirms that projections from cell clusters of Jo stereotypically associate with only one axon tract according to their location in the pedicellar epithelium, consistent with a topographic plan. At the molecular level, all neuronal elements of the Jo pathway to the brain express the lipocalin Lazarillo, a cell surface epitope that regulates axogenesis in the primary axon scaffold itself, and putatively during fasciculation of the Jo projections to the brain. Central projections from Jo first contact the primary axon scaffold of the deutocerebral brain at mid-embryogenesis, and in the adult traverse mechanosensory/motor neuropils similar to those in Drosophila. These axons then terminate among protocerebral commissures containing premotor interneurons known to regulate flight behavior.

Abstract Image

蝗虫约翰斯顿器官的中枢投射:轴突生成与大脑神经结构
在一系列昆虫物种中,约翰斯顿器官(Jo)是触角的风敏器官和/或听觉器官,其轴突普遍投射到大脑。在蝗虫的胚胎发育中期,这一通路就已经存在,但尚未研究其构建所涉及的分束过程。末端投射到大脑的精细神经组织也仍未得到解决,而这些信息不仅对了解介导 Jo-mediated 行为的神经回路至关重要,而且对提供比较数据以深入了解其进化过程也至关重要。在本文的研究中,我们采用神经元特异性、轴突特异性和上皮域标签来表明,在早期胚胎发育过程中,蝗虫大脑的通路是以逐步的方式建立的,因为来自足柄上的乔细胞簇的过程首先是相互分束,然后与构成触角先驱轴突支架的两条束分束。对分束模式的比较证实,Jo细胞群的突起根据其在花梗上皮细胞中的位置,定型地只与一条轴突束联系,这与地形图一致。在分子水平上,通往大脑的Jo通路的所有神经元元件都表达脂钙蛋白Lazarillo,这是一种细胞表面表位,可调节初级轴突支架本身的轴突生成,并可能在Jo向大脑投射的分束过程中起作用。Jo的中枢投射在胚胎中期首次接触去大脑的初级轴突支架,在成体中穿过机械感觉/运动神经瞳孔,这与果蝇的情况类似。然后,这些轴突终止于原脑神经丛,其中含有已知能调节飞行行为的前运动中间神经元。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Development Genes and Evolution
Development Genes and Evolution 生物-发育生物学
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
13
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Development Genes and Evolution publishes high-quality reports on all aspects of development biology and evolutionary biology. The journal reports on experimental and bioinformatics work at the systemic, cellular and molecular levels in the field of animal and plant systems, covering key aspects of the following topics: Embryological and genetic analysis of model and non-model organisms Genes and pattern formation in invertebrates, vertebrates and plants Axial patterning, embryonic induction and fate maps Cellular mechanisms of morphogenesis and organogenesis Stem cells and regeneration Functional genomics of developmental processes Developmental diversity and evolution Evolution of developmentally relevant genes Phylogeny of animals and plants Microevolution Paleontology.
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