白蚁大脑可塑结构的变化与分工和衰老有关。

IF 1.7 4区 生物学 Q4 CELL BIOLOGY
Tomoki Ishibashi, A.S.M. Waliullah, Shuhei Aramaki, Masaki Kamiya, Tomoaki Kahyo, Katsumasa Nakamura, Eisuke Tasaki, Mamoru Takata, Mitsutoshi Setou, Kenji Matsuura
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引用次数: 1

摘要

分工是昆虫社会的一个突出特征,不同种姓从事不同的专业任务。由于大脑差异与行为差异有关,大脑解剖结构可能与种姓多态性有关。在这里,我们发现白蚁的大脑形态随着种姓分化和年龄的增长而发生显著变化。大脑形态被证明与生殖分工有关,生殖个体(腭和新生殖体)的大脑比非生殖个体(工人和士兵)大。显微计算机断层扫描(CT)成像和解剖观察表明,国王的大脑形态在黑暗中的漫长生活中随着视叶的缩小而发生了显著变化。行为实验表明,成熟的初级王由于视叶萎缩而丧失视觉功能。这些结果表明,白蚁在经历种姓分化时,会重组神经系统以执行必要的任务,即使在最后蜕皮后,它们的大脑形态也会发生灵活的变化。这项研究表明,群居昆虫的大脑形态与种姓和衰老有关,分工的进化是由专门任务的不同神经系统的发展所支撑的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Plastic brain structure changes associated with the division of labor and aging in termites

Plastic brain structure changes associated with the division of labor and aging in termites

Division of labor is a prominent feature of social insect societies, where different castes engage in different specialized tasks. As brain differences are associated with behavioral differences, brain anatomy may be linked to caste polymorphism. Here, we show that termite brain morphology changes markedly with caste differentiation and age in the termite, Reticulitermes speratus. Brain morphology was shown to be associated with reproductive division of labor, with reproductive individuals (alates and neotenic reproductives) having larger brains than nonreproductives (workers and soldiers). Micro-computed tomography (CT) imaging and dissection observations showed that the king's brain morphology changed markedly with shrinkage of the optic lobes during their long life in the dark. Behavioral experiments showed that mature primary kings lose visual function as a result of optic lobe shrinkage. These results suggested that termites restructure their nervous systems to perform necessary tasks as they undergo caste differentiation, and that they also show flexible changes in brain morphology even after the final molt. This study showed that brain morphology in social insects is linked to caste and aging, and that the evolution of the division of labor is underpinned by the development of diverse neural systems for specialized tasks.

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来源期刊
Development Growth & Differentiation
Development Growth & Differentiation 生物-发育生物学
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
4.00%
发文量
62
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: Development Growth & Differentiation (DGD) publishes three types of articles: original, resource, and review papers. Original papers are on any subjects having a context in development, growth, and differentiation processes in animals, plants, and microorganisms, dealing with molecular, genetic, cellular and organismal phenomena including metamorphosis and regeneration, while using experimental, theoretical, and bioinformatic approaches. Papers on other related fields are also welcome, such as stem cell biology, genomics, neuroscience, Evodevo, Ecodevo, and medical science as well as related methodology (new or revised techniques) and bioresources. Resource papers describe a dataset, such as whole genome sequences and expressed sequence tags (ESTs), with some biological insights, which should be valuable for studying the subjects as mentioned above. Submission of review papers is also encouraged, especially those providing a new scope based on the authors’ own study, or a summarization of their study series.
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