Abstract

Vestimentiferan tubeworms are marine invertebrates that inhabit chemosynthetic environments, and although recent molecular phylogenetic analyses have suggested that vestimentiferan tubeworms are derived from polychaete annelids, they show some morphological features that are different from other polychaetes. For example, vestimentiferans lack a digestive tract and have less body segments and comparative neuroanatomy can provide essential insight into the vestimentiferan body plan and its evolution. In the present study, we investigated the adult nervous system in the vestimentiferan Lamellibrachia satsuma using antibodies against synapsin, serotonin, FMRMamide and acetylated α-tubulin. We also examined the expressions of neural marker genes, elav and synaptotagmin to reveal the distribution of neuronal cell bodies. Brain anatomy shows simple organization in Lamellibrachia compared to other polychaetes. This simplification is probably due to the loss of the digestive tract, passing through the body between the brain and the subesophageal ganglion. In contrast, the ventral nerve cord shows a repeated organizational structure as in the other polychaetes, despite the absence of the multiple segmentation of the trunk. These results suggest that the brain anatomy is variable depending on the function and the condition of surrounding tissues, and that the formation of the rope ladder-like nervous system of the ventral nerve cord is independent from segmentation in polychaetes.

Highlights

  • Vestimentiferan tubeworms are marine invertebrates that live in chemosynthetic environments such as hydrothermal vents and hydrocarbon seeps

  • Brain The brain of L. satsuma is situated at the ventroanterior position in the vestimentum where the diverged ventral nerve cord meets at the ventral midline (Figure 2A–C)

  • The neuroanatomy of L. satsuma was examined in detail by immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization

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Summary

Introduction

Vestimentiferan tubeworms are marine invertebrates that live in chemosynthetic environments such as hydrothermal vents and hydrocarbon seeps They have a unique body plan as they lack a digestive system, including a mouth and anus. The phylogenetic position of vestimentiferans has been controversial for a long time [5,6], recent morphological and molecular phylogenies have strongly supported that they are modified polychaetes and they have subsequently been assigned to the family Siboglinidae together with franulates, moniliferans and Osedax [7215] Their unique morphological features have fascinated scientists: our knowledge of the body plan of vestimentiferans and its origin is limited, largely because of poor accessibility to specimens for examination

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