Evolutionary shifts in the developmental control of neuron number

Lead Research Organisation: University of Bristol
Department Name: Biological Sciences

Abstract

Brain size varies massively across species, often largely explained by variation in the production of neurons during development. Although we have some knowledge of the developmental mechanisms controlling neuron production in certain well studied species, we are only beginning to explore how these developmental mechanisms change to facilitate the evolution of neuron number. Understanding the proximate basis of neural variation is critical for diverse questions in evolutionary neuroscience, from identifying potential constraints and trade-offs in brain evolution, to explore relationships between neural traits and behavioural variation. This project aims to tackle these questions using Heliconiini, a diverse tribe of Neotropical butterflies, as a study system. We have recently shown that one region of the brain that has particular importance in learning and memory, the mushroom bodies, varies by over 25X across Heliconiini butterflies. This extreme variation is driven by a massive expansion in the number of Kenyon cells, neurons that form the mushroom body. We now want to understand how this variation in Kenyon cell number is determined by changes in the developmental control of neurogenesis across species. The primary goals of the project are to test the role of four processes, all of which could alter cell production, in shaping Kenyon cell number across Heliconiini: i) increased neuroblast number at the onset of neurogenesis, ii) accelerated cell-cycle rates during neurogenesis, iii) extension in the duration of neurogenesis, iv) reduced or delayed patterns of apoptosis of neuroblasts. This work will be performed by comparing patterns of development across species which vary in Kenyon cell in known ways. It will form the foundation of our understanding of how Kenyon cell neurogenesis varies across species. Subsequent work will use this foundation to study the functional effects of candidate genes identified by our lab as regulators of mushroom body evolution.

Publications

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Studentship Projects

Project Reference Relationship Related To Start End Student Name
BB/T008741/1 01/10/2020 30/09/2028
2750262 Studentship BB/T008741/1 01/10/2022 30/09/2026 Amaia Alcalde Anton