Literature DB >> 24847885

The ctenophore genome and the evolutionary origins of neural systems.

Leonid L Moroz1, Kevin M Kocot2, Mathew R Citarella3, Sohn Dosung3, Tigran P Norekian4, Inna S Povolotskaya5, Anastasia P Grigorenko6, Christopher Dailey7, Eugene Berezikov8, Katherine M Buckley9, Andrey Ptitsyn3, Denis Reshetov10, Krishanu Mukherjee3, Tatiana P Moroz3, Yelena Bobkova3, Fahong Yu11, Vladimir V Kapitonov12, Jerzy Jurka12, Yuri V Bobkov3, Joshua J Swore4, David O Girardo4, Alexander Fodor3, Fedor Gusev6, Rachel Sanford3, Rebecca Bruders4, Ellen Kittler13, Claudia E Mills14, Jonathan P Rast9, Romain Derelle5, Victor V Solovyev15, Fyodor A Kondrashov16, Billie J Swalla14, Jonathan V Sweedler7, Evgeny I Rogaev17, Kenneth M Halanych2, Andrea B Kohn3.   

Abstract

The origins of neural systems remain unresolved. In contrast to other basal metazoans, ctenophores (comb jellies) have both complex nervous and mesoderm-derived muscular systems. These holoplanktonic predators also have sophisticated ciliated locomotion, behaviour and distinct development. Here we present the draft genome of Pleurobrachia bachei, Pacific sea gooseberry, together with ten other ctenophore transcriptomes, and show that they are remarkably distinct from other animal genomes in their content of neurogenic, immune and developmental genes. Our integrative analyses place Ctenophora as the earliest lineage within Metazoa. This hypothesis is supported by comparative analysis of multiple gene families, including the apparent absence of HOX genes, canonical microRNA machinery, and reduced immune complement in ctenophores. Although two distinct nervous systems are well recognized in ctenophores, many bilaterian neuron-specific genes and genes of 'classical' neurotransmitter pathways either are absent or, if present, are not expressed in neurons. Our metabolomic and physiological data are consistent with the hypothesis that ctenophore neural systems, and possibly muscle specification, evolved independently from those in other animals.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 24847885      PMCID: PMC4337882          DOI: 10.1038/nature13400

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  61 in total

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  212 in total

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