Phylogenetic Origins of Brain Organisers

Author:

Robertshaw Ellen1ORCID,Kiecker Clemens1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. MRC Centre for Developmental Neurobiology, King's College London, 4th Floor, New Hunt's House, Guy's Hospital Campus, London SE1 1UL, UK

Abstract

The regionalisation of the nervous system begins early in embryogenesis, concomitant with the establishment of the anteroposterior (AP) and dorsoventral (DV) body axes. The molecular mechanisms that drive axis induction appear to be conserved throughout the animal kingdom and may be phylogenetically older than the emergence of bilateral symmetry. As a result of this process, groups of patterning genes that are equally well conserved are expressed at specific AP and DV coordinates of the embryo. In the emerging nervous system of vertebrate embryos, this initial pattern is refined by local signalling centres,secondary organisers, that regulate patterning, proliferation, and axonal pathfinding in adjacent neuroepithelium. The main secondary organisers for the AP neuraxis are the midbrain-hindbrain boundary, zona limitans intrathalamica, and anterior neural ridge and for the DV neuraxis the notochord, floor plate, and roof plate. A search for homologous secondary organisers in nonvertebrate lineages has led to controversy over their phylogenetic origins. Based on a recent study in hemichordates, it has been suggested that the AP secondary organisers evolved at the base of the deuterostome superphylum, earlier than previously thought. According to this view, the lack of signalling centres in some deuterostome lineages is likely to reflect a secondary loss due to adaptive processes. We propose that the relative evolutionary flexibility of secondary organisers has contributed to a broader morphological complexity of nervous systems in different clades.

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science

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1. Ambulacrarians and the Ancestry of Deuterostome Nervous Systems;Results and Problems in Cell Differentiation;2019

2. The developing optic tectum: An asymmetrically organized system and the need for a redefinition of the notion of sensitive period;International Journal of Developmental Neuroscience;2018-12-17

3. Rodent Zic Genes in Neural Network Wiring;Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology;2018

4. Forebrain Development in Vertebrates;The Wiley Handbook of Evolutionary Neuroscience;2016-12-23

5. On Expression Patterns and Developmental Origin of Human Brain Regions;PLOS Computational Biology;2016-08-26

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