Abstract
BackgroundThe Solenogastres (or Neomeniomorpha) are a taxon of aplacophoran molluscs with contentious phylogenetic placement. Since available developmental data on non-conchiferan (that is, aculiferan) molluscs mainly stem from polyplacophorans, data on aplacophorans are needed to clarify evolutionary questions concerning the morphological features of the last common ancestor (LCA) of the Aculifera and the entire Mollusca. We therefore investigated the development of the nervous system in two solenogasters, Wirenia argentea and Gymnomenia pellucida, using immunocytochemistry and electron microscopy.ResultsNervous system formation starts simultaneously from the apical and abapical pole of the larva with the development of a few cells of the apical organ and a posterior neurogenic domain. A pair of neurite bundles grows out from both the neuropil of the apical organ and the posterior neurogenic domain. After their fusion in the region of the prototroch, which is innervated by an underlying serotonin-like immunoreactive (−LIR) plexus, the larva exhibits two longitudinal neurite bundles - the future lateral nerve cords. The apical organ in its fully developed state exhibits approximately 8 to 10 flask-shaped cells but no peripheral cells. The entire ventral nervous system, which includes a pair of longitudinal neurite bundles (the future ventral nerve cords) and a serotonin-LIR ventromedian nerve plexus, appears simultaneously and is established after the lateral nervous system. During metamorphosis the apical organ and the prototrochal nerve plexus are lost.ConclusionsThe development of the nervous system in early solenogaster larvae shows striking similarities to other spiralians, especially polychaetes, in exhibiting an apical organ with flask-shaped cells, a single pair of longitudinal neurite bundles, a serotonin-LIR innervation of the prototroch, and formation of these structures from an anterior and a posterior neurogenic domain. This provides evidence for an ancestral spiralian pattern of early nervous system development and a LCA of the Spiralia with a single pair of nerve cords. In later nervous system development, however, the annelids deviate from all other spiralians including solenogasters in forming a posterior growth zone, which initiates teloblastic growth. Since this mode of organogenesis is confined to annelids, we conclude that the LCA of both molluscs and spiralians was unsegmented.
Highlights
IntroductionThe Solenogastres (or Neomeniomorpha) are a taxon of aplacophoran molluscs with contentious phylogenetic placement
The Solenogastres are a taxon of aplacophoran molluscs with contentious phylogenetic placement
In order to describe the larval nervous system of the Solenogastres and to further test the hypotheses on segmented or unsegmented ancestry of molluscs, we investigated the development of the nervous system in two species of solenogasters, Wirenia argentea Odhner, 1921 and Gymnomenia pellucida Odhner, 1921 [55]
Summary
The Solenogastres (or Neomeniomorpha) are a taxon of aplacophoran molluscs with contentious phylogenetic placement. On the contrary, have argued in favor of a segmented, annelid-like molluscan ancestry, mainly owing to the occurrence of serially repeated organs in some molluscan taxa, in particular in the polyplacophorans and monoplacophorans (for example, [28,29,30,31,32]) This notion is in line with the view of some developmental geneticists that segmentation was a feature of the last common ancestor (LCA) of protostomes or even bilaterians [33,34,35]. In the Polyplacophora, developmental studies did not reveal any signs of a similar segmental formation of the serially arranged shell plates, muscles, or pedal commissures [43,44,45] These findings are corroborated by recent data on myogenesis in Wirenia argentea, one of the two solenogaster species analyzed which likewise do not show such a segmental pattern [14]
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