Abstract

BackgroundComparative studies of neuroanatomy and neurodevelopment provide valuable information for phylogenetic inference. Beyond that, they reveal transformations of neuroanatomical structures during animal evolution and modifications in the developmental processes that have shaped these structures. In the extremely diverse Arthropoda, such comparative studies contribute with ever-increasing structural resolution and taxon coverage to our understanding of nervous system evolution. However, at the neurodevelopmental level, in-depth data remain still largely confined to comparably few laboratory model organisms. Therefore, we studied postembryonic neurogenesis in six species of the bizarre Pycnogonida (sea spiders), which – as the likely sister group of all remaining chelicerates – promise to illuminate neurodevelopmental changes in the chelicerate lineage.ResultsWe performed in vivo cell proliferation experiments with the thymidine analogs 5-bromo-2′-deoxyuridine and 5-ethynl-2′-deoxyuridine coupled to fluorescent histochemical staining and immunolabeling, in order to compare ventral nerve cord anatomy and to localize and characterize centers of postembryonic neurogenesis. We report interspecific differences in the architecture of the subesophageal ganglion (SEG) and show the presence of segmental “ventral organs” (VOs) that act as centers of neural cell production during gangliogenesis. These VOs are either incorporated into the ganglionic soma cortex or found on the external ganglion surface. Despite this difference, several shared features support homology of the two VO types, including (1) a specific arrangement of the cells around a small central cavity, (2) the presence of asymmetrically dividing neural stem cell-like precursors, (3) the migration of newborn cells along corresponding pathways into the cortex, and (4) the same VO origin and formation earlier in development.ConclusionsEvaluation of our findings relative to current hypotheses on pycnogonid phylogeny resolves a bipartite SEG and internal VOs as plesiomorphic conditions in pycnogonids. Although chelicerate taxa other than Pycnogonida lack comparable VOs, they are a characteristic feature of myriapod gangliogenesis. Accordingly, we propose internal VOs with neurogenic function to be part of the ground pattern of Arthropoda. Further, our findings illustrate the importance of dense sampling in old arthropod lineages – even if as gross-anatomically uniform as Pycnogonida – in order to reliably differentiate plesiomorphic from apomorphic neurodevelopmental characteristics prior to outgroup comparison.

Highlights

  • Comparative studies of neuroanatomy and neurodevelopment provide valuable information for phylogenetic inference

  • In the three callipallenid representatives (Meridionale sp., S. cheilorhynchus, C. brevirostris), the palpal and ovigeral neuromeres fuse during development into a bipartite subesophageal ganglion (SEG; Fig. 2b, c)

  • By evaluating our findings in light of current hypotheses on pycnogonid phylogeny, we reveal a bipartite SEG as the plesiomorphic condition of sea spiders and find evidence for the convergent fusion of walking leg neuromere 1 to this SEG in three different pycnogonid lineages

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Summary

Introduction

Comparative studies of neuroanatomy and neurodevelopment provide valuable information for phylogenetic inference. Beyond that, they reveal transformations of neuroanatomical structures during animal evolution and modifications in the developmental processes that have shaped these structures. Scrutiny of different features pertaining to nervous system development and adult neuroanatomy (e.g., [3,4,5,6]) helped to clarify the relationships of the major mandibulate groups Myriapoda, Hexapoda and crustaceans: in agreement with molecular evidence (e.g., [7,8,9]), the neural characters consolidated support for the taxon Tetraconata (paraphyletic crustaceans + Hexapoda), thereby overhauling the traditionally advocated clade of myriapods and hexapods (see [1] for review). The assessment and interpretation of neuroanatomical and neurodevelopmental character complexes in the context of arthropod phylogeny and evolution – more recently even in fossil representatives – has morphed into a prospering field, occasionally referred to as “neurophylogeny” or “neural cladistics” [10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17]

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