乔娜幼虫的干尾连接区每隔20秒自主表达拍打尾巴的爆发。

T. Hara, Shuya Hasegawa, Yasushi Iwatani, A. Nishino
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引用次数: 3

摘要

水生脊椎动物的游泳运动,如鱼和蝌蚪,是通过脊髓中的神经元网络表达的。这些网络平行排列,无处不在分布,并沿脊髓相互耦合,以表达适应各种输入网络的波动模式。虽然这些系统在脊椎动物游泳者中得到了广泛的研究,但它们在脊索动物系统发育中的进化起源仍不清楚。海鞘是脊椎动物的姐妹类,它的蝌蚪幼虫可以在海水中自由游动。在本研究中,我们检测了在任意位置切割的海鞘幼鱼的前后体碎片的运动能力。对200多个碎片的检查显示了一个必要且足够的身体区域,该区域仅占体长的10%,包括躯干-尾巴连接处。“中段”身体碎片,包括躯干-尾巴交界处,但不包括大部分前肢和后肢,每隔20秒自动表达周期性的拍打尾巴的爆发。我们比较了在不同感官条件下,由中间碎片和整个幼虫表达的拍打尾巴爆发的持续时间和间隔。得到的结果表明,身体中部以外的部分对缩短游泳间隔(尤其是在黑暗中)和改变游泳持续时间有影响。我们认为,乔娜幼虫通过改变自主和周期性的运动驱动来表达游泳行为,这些运动驱动在躯干-尾部交界处局部运行。
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The trunk-tail junctional region in Ciona larvae autonomously expresses tail-beating bursts at ∼20-s intervals.
Swimming locomotion in aquatic vertebrates, such as fish and tadpoles, is expressed through neuron networks in the spinal cord. These networks are arranged in parallel, ubiquitously distributed, and mutually coupled along the spinal cord to express undulation patterns accommodated to various inputs into the networks. While these systems have been widely studied in vertebrate swimmers, their evolutionary origin along the chordate phylogeny remains unclear. Ascidians, representing a sister group of vertebrates, give rise to tadpole larvae that swim freely in seawater. In the present study, we examined the locomotor ability of the anterior and posterior body fragments of larvae of the ascidian Ciona that had been cut at an arbitrary position. Examinations of more than 200 fragments revealed a necessary and sufficient body region that spanned only ∼10% of the body length and included the trunk-tail junction. "Mid-piece" body fragments, which included the trunk-tail junctional region, but excluded most of the anterior trunk and posterior tail, autonomously expressed periodic tail-beating bursts at ∼20-s intervals. We compared the durations and intervals of tail-beating bursts expressed by mid-piece fragments, and also by whole larvae under different sensory conditions. The results obtained suggested that body parts outside the mid-piece had effects to shorten swimming intervals, particularly in the dark, and to vary durations of bursts. We propose that Ciona larvae express swimming behaviors by modifying autonomous and periodic locomotor drives that operate locally in the trunk-tail junctional region.
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