The cephalopod large brain enigma: are conserved mechanisms of stem cell expansion the key?
Deryckere, A.; Seuntjens, E. (2018). The cephalopod large brain enigma: are conserved mechanisms of stem cell expansion the key? Frontiers in Physiology 9: 8. https://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2018.01160
In: Frontiers in Physiology. Frontiers Media SA: Lausanne. e-ISSN 1664-042X, meer
Within the clade of mollusks, cephalopods have developed an unusually large and complex nervous system. The increased complexity of the cephalopod centralized "brain" parallels an amazing amount of complex behaviors that culminate in one order, the octopods. The mechanisms that enable evolution of expanded brains in invertebrates remain enigmatic. While expression mapping of known molecular pathways demonstrated the conservation of major neurogenesis pathways and revealed neurogenic territories, it did not explain why cephalopods could massively increase their brain size compared to other mollusks. Such an increase is reminiscent of the expansion of the cerebral cortex in mammalians, which have enlarged their number and variety of neurogenic stem cells. We hypothesize that similar mechanisms might be at play in cephalopods and that focusing on the stem cell biology of cephalopod neurogenesis and genetic innovations might be smarter strategies to uncover the mechanism that has driven cephalopod brain expansion.
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