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Title: Structure of the planarian central nervous system (CNS) revealed by neuronal cell markers
Authors: Agata, Kiyokazu
Soejima, Yukihiro
Kato, Kentaro
Kobayashi, Chiyoko
Umesono, Yoshihiko
Watanabe, Kenji
Author's alias: 阿形, 清和
Issue Date: Mar-1998
Publisher: Zoological Society of Japan
Journal title: Zoological Science
Volume: 15
Issue: 3
Start page: 433
End page: 440
Abstract: Planarians are considered to be among the most primitive animals which developed the central nervous system (CNS). To understand the origin and evolution of the CNS, we have isolated a neural marker gene from a planarian, Dugesia japonica, and analyzed the structure of the planarian CNS by in situ hybridization. The planarian CNS is located on the ventral side of the body, and composed of a mass of cephalic ganglions in the head region and a pair of ventral nerve cords (VNC). Cephalic ganglions cluster independently from VNC, are more dorsal than VNC, and form an inverted U-shaped brain-like structure with nine branches on each outer side. Two eyes are located on the dorsal side of the 3(rd) branch and visual axons form optic chiasma on the dorsal-inside region of the inverted U-shaped brain. The 6(th)-9(th) branches cluster more closely and form auricles on the surface which may function as the sensory organ of taste. We found that the gross structure of the planarian CNS along the anterior-posterior (A-P) axis is strikingly similar to the distribution pattern of the "primary" neurons of vertebrate embryos which differentiate at the neural plate stage to provide a fundamental nervous system, although the vertebrate CNS is located on the dorsal side. These data suggest that the basic plan for the CNS development along the A-P axis might have been acquired at an early stage of evolution before conversion of the location of the CNS from the ventral to the dorsal side.
Rights: (c) 日本動物学会 / Zoological Society of Japan
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2433/85309
DOI(Published Version): 10.2108/zsj.15.433
Appears in Collections:Zoological Science

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