Invertebrate Nervous Systems (invertebrate + nervous_system)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Myocyte enhancer factor 2 (MEF2) is a key modulator of the expression of the prothoracicotropic hormone gene in the silkworm, Bombyx mori

FEBS JOURNAL, Issue 15 2005
Kunihiro Shiomi
Prothoracicotropic hormone (PTTH) plays a central role in controlling molting, metamorphosis, and diapause termination in insects by stimulating the prothoracic glands to synthesize and release the molting hormone, ecdysone. Using Autographa californica nucleopolyhedrovirus (AcNPV)-mediated transient gene transfer into the central nervous sytem (CNS) of the silkworm, Bombyx mori, we identified two cis -regulatory elements that participate in the decision and the enhancement of PTTH gene expression in PTTH-producing neurosecretory cells (PTPCs). The cis -element mediating the enhancement of PTTH gene expression binds the transcription factor Bombyx myocyte enhancer factor 2 (BmMEF2). The BmMEF2 gene was expressed in various tissues including the CNS. In brain, the BmMEF2 gene was expressed at elevated levels in two types of lateral neurosecretory cells, namely PTPCs and corazonin-like immunoreactive lateral neurosecretory cells. Overexpression of BmMEF2 cDNA caused an increase in the transcription of PTTH. Therefore, BmMEF2 appears to be particularly important in the brain where it is responsible for the differentiation of lateral neurosecretory cells, including the enhancement of PTTH gene expression. This is the first report to identify a target gene of MEF2 in the invertebrate nervous system. [source]


Evolution of invertebrate nervous systems: the Chaetognatha as a case study

ACTA ZOOLOGICA, Issue 1 2010
Steffen Harzsch
Abstract Harzsch, S. and Wanninger, A. 2010. Evolution of invertebrate nervous systems: the Chaetognatha as a case study. ,Acta Zoologica (Stockholm) 91: 35,43 Although recent molecular studies indicate that Chaetognatha may be one of the earliest Bilaterian offshoots, the phylogenetic position of this taxon still is a matter of ongoing debate. In this contribution, we review recent attempts to contribute phylogenetic information on the Chaetognatha by analysing structure and development of their nervous system (neurophylogeny). Analysing this group of organisms also has a major impact on our understanding of nervous system evolution in Bilateria. We review recent evidence from this field and suggest that Urbilateria already was equipped with the genetic toolkit required to build a complex, concentrated central nervous system (CNS), although this was not expressed phenotypically so that Urbilateria was equipped with a nerve plexus and not a CNS. This implies that in the deep metazoan nodes, concentration of the ancestral plexus occurred twice independently, namely once after the protostome,deuterostome split on the branch leading to the protostomes (resulting in a ventrally positioned nerve cord) and once along the chordate line (with a dorsal nerve cord). [source]


Calcium signaling in invertebrate glial cells

GLIA, Issue 7 2006
Christian Lohr
Abstract Calcium signaling studies in invertebrate glial cells have been performed mainly in the nervous systems of the medicinal leech (Hirudo medicinalis) and the sphinx moth Manduca sexta. The main advantages of studing glial cells in invertebrate nervous systems are the large size of invertebrate glial cells and their easy accessibility for optical and electrophysiological recordings. Glial cells in both insects and annelids express voltage-gated calcium channels and, in the case of leech glial cells, calcium-permeable neurotransmitter receptors, which allow calcium influx as one major source for cytosolic calcium transients. Calcium release from intracellular stores can be induced by metabotropic receptor activation in leech glial cells, but appears to play a minor role in calcium signaling. In glial cells of the antennal lobe of Manduca, voltage-gated calcium signaling changes during postembryonic development and is essential for the migration of the glial cells, a key step in axon guidance and in stabilization of the glomerular structures that are characteristic of primary olfactory centers. © 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source]