An Adaptive Threshold in Mammalian Neocortical Evolution

被引:113
作者
Lewitus, Eric [1 ]
Kelava, Iva [1 ]
Kalinka, Alex T. [1 ]
Tomancak, Pavel [1 ]
Huttner, Wieland B. [1 ]
机构
[1] Max Planck Inst Mol Cell Biol & Genet, Dresden, Germany
基金
欧洲研究理事会;
关键词
OUTER SUBVENTRICULAR ZONE; NEURAL STEM; PROGENITOR-CELL; RADIAL GLIA; ASYMMETRIC DIVISION; LISSENCEPHALIC PRIMATE; GENETIC ARCHITECTURE; NONNEURONAL CELLS; NEURONS ARISE; BRAIN;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pbio.1002000
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Expansion of the neocortex is a hallmark of human evolution. However, determining which adaptive mechanisms facilitated its expansion remains an open question. Here we show, using the gyrencephaly index (GI) and other physiological and life-history data for 102 mammalian species, that gyrencephaly is an ancestral mammalian trait. We find that variation in GI does not evolve linearly across species, but that mammals constitute two principal groups above and below a GI threshold value of 1.5, approximately equal to 10(9) neurons, which may be characterized by distinct constellations of physiological and life-history traits. By integrating data on neurogenic period, neuroepithelial founder pool size, cell-cycle length, progenitor-type abundances, and cortical neuron number into discrete mathematical models, we identify symmetric proliferative divisions of basal progenitors in the subventricular zone of the developing neocortex as evolutionarily necessary for generating a 14-fold increase in daily prenatal neuron production, traversal of the GI threshold, and thus establishment of two principal groups. We conclude that, despite considerable neuroanatomical differences, changes in the length of the neurogenic period alone, rather than any novel neurogenic progenitor lineage, are sufficient to explain differences in neuron number and neocortical size between species within the same principal group.
引用
收藏
页数:15
相关论文
共 92 条
[1]   Neural stem and progenitor cells shorten S-phase on commitment to neuron production [J].
Arai, Yoko ;
Pulvers, Jeremy N. ;
Haffner, Christiane ;
Schilling, Britta ;
Nuesslein, Ina ;
Calegari, Federico ;
Huttner, Wieland B. .
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2011, 2
[2]   Equal Numbers of Neuronal and Nonneuronal Cells Make the Human Brain an Isometrically Scaled-Up Primate Brain [J].
Azevedo, Frederico A. C. ;
Carvalho, Ludmila R. B. ;
Grinberg, Lea T. ;
Farfel, Jose Marcelo ;
Ferretti, Renata E. L. ;
Leite, Renata E. P. ;
Jacob Filho, Wilson ;
Lent, Roberto ;
Herculano-Houzel, Suzana .
JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE NEUROLOGY, 2009, 513 (05) :532-541
[3]   Changing numbers of neuronal and non-neuronal cells underlie postnatal brain growth in the rat [J].
Bandeira, Fabiana ;
Lent, Roberto ;
Herculano-Houzel, Suzana .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2009, 106 (33) :14108-14113
[4]  
Bayer SA., 2006, ATLAS HUMAN CENTRAL
[5]   A distal enhancer and an ultraconserved exon are derived from a novel retroposon [J].
Bejerano, G ;
Lowe, CB ;
Ahituv, N ;
King, B ;
Siepel, A ;
Salama, SR ;
Rubin, EM ;
Kent, WJ ;
Haussler, D .
NATURE, 2006, 441 (7089) :87-90
[6]   Precursor Diversity and Complexity of Lineage Relationships in the Outer Subventricular Zone of the Primate [J].
Betizeau, Marion ;
Cortay, Veronique ;
Patti, Dorothee ;
Pfister, Sabina ;
Gautier, Elodie ;
Bellemin-Menard, Angele ;
Afanassieff, Marielle ;
Huissoud, Cyril ;
Douglas, Rodney J. ;
Kennedy, Henry ;
Dehay, Colette .
NEURON, 2013, 80 (02) :442-457
[7]   The delayed rise of present-day mammals [J].
Bininda-Emonds, Olaf R. P. ;
Cardillo, Marcel ;
Jones, Kate E. ;
MacPhee, Ross D. E. ;
Beck, Robin M. D. ;
Grenyer, Richard ;
Price, Samantha A. ;
Vos, Rutger A. ;
Gittleman, John L. ;
Purvis, Andy .
NATURE, 2007, 446 (7135) :507-512
[8]  
BOLKER JA, 1994, AM ZOOL, V34, P313
[9]   SIMMAP: Stochastic character mapping of discrete traits on phylogenies [J].
Bollback, JP .
BMC BIOINFORMATICS, 2006, 7 (1)
[10]   Emerging roles of neural stem cells in cerebral cortex development and evolution [J].
Borrell, Victor ;
Reillo, Isabel .
DEVELOPMENTAL NEUROBIOLOGY, 2012, 72 (07) :955-971