Sourcing high tissue quality brains from deceased wild primates with known socio‐ecology

Author:

Gräßle Tobias12ORCID,Crockford Catherine345ORCID,Eichner Cornelius6ORCID,Girard‐Buttoz Cédric345ORCID,Jäger Carsten78ORCID,Kirilina Evgeniya79ORCID,Lipp Ilona7ORCID,Düx Ariane12ORCID,Edwards Luke7ORCID,Jauch Anna7ORCID,Kopp Kathrin S.10ORCID,Paquette Michael7ORCID,Pine Kerrin7ORCID,Haun Daniel B. M.10ORCID,McElreath Richard4ORCID,Anwander Alfred6ORCID,Gunz Philipp11ORCID,Morawski Markus78ORCID,Friederici Angela D.6ORCID,Weiskopf Nikolaus712ORCID,Leendertz Fabian H.12ORCID,Wittig Roman M.345ORCID,

Affiliation:

1. Epidemiology of highly pathogenic microorganisms Robert Koch‐Institute Berlin Germany

2. Helmholtz Institute for One Health Greifswald Germany

3. Ape Social Mind Lab Institute of Cognitive Science Marc Jeannerod, UMR 5229, CNRS Lyon France

4. Department of Human Behavior, Ecology and Culture Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology Leipzig Germany

5. Taï Chimpanzee Project Centre Suisse de Recherches Scientifiques en Côte d'Ivoire Abidjan Ivory Coast

6. Department of Neuropsychology Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences Leipzig Germany

7. Department of Neurophysics Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences Leipzig Germany

8. Paul Flechsig Institute ‐ Center of Neuropathology and Brain Research, Faculty of Medicine Universität Leipzig Germany

9. Center for Cognitive Neuroscience Berlin Freie Universität Berlin Berlin Germany

10. Department of Comparative Cultural Psychology Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology Leipzig Germany

11. Department of Human Evolution Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology Leipzig Germany

12. Felix Bloch Institute for Solid State Physics, Faculty of Physics and Earth Sciences Leipzig University Leipzig Germany

Abstract

Abstract The selection pressures that drove dramatic encephalisation processes through the mammal lineage remain elusive, as does knowledge of brain structure reorganisation through this process. In particular, considerable structural brain changes are present across the primate lineage, culminating in the complex human brain that allows for unique behaviours such as language and sophisticated tool use. To understand this evolution, a diverse sample set of humans' closest relatives with varying socio‐ecologies is needed. However, current brain banks predominantly curate brains from primates that died in zoological gardens. We try to address this gap by establishing a field pipeline mitigating the challenges associated with brain extractions of wild primates in their natural habitat. The success of our approach is demonstrated by our ability to acquire a novel brain sample of deceased primates with highly variable socio‐ecological exposure and a particular focus on wild chimpanzees. Methods in acquiring brain tissue from wild settings are comprehensively explained, highlighting the feasibility of conducting brain extraction procedures under strict biosafety measures by trained veterinarians in field sites. Brains are assessed at a fine‐structural level via high‐resolution MRI and state‐of‐the‐art histology. Analyses confirm that excellent tissue quality of primate brains sourced in the field can be achieved with a comparable tissue quality of brains acquired from zoo‐living primates. Our field methods are noninvasive, here defined as not harming living animals, and may be applied to other mammal systems than primates. In sum, the field protocol and methodological pipeline validated here pose a major advance for assessing the influence of socio‐ecology on medium to large mammal brains, at both macro‐ and microstructural levels as well as aiding with the functional annotation of brain regions and neuronal pathways via specific behaviour assessments.

Funder

Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung

Max-Planck-Gesellschaft

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecological Modeling,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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