Literature DB >> 27561684

Prenatal Brain-Body Allometry in Mammals.

Andrew C Halley1.   

Abstract

Variation in relative brain size among adult mammals is produced by different patterns of brain and body growth across ontogeny. Fetal development plays a central role in generating this diversity, and aspects of prenatal physiology such as maternal relative metabolic rate, altriciality, and placental morphology have been proposed to explain allometric differences in neonates and adults. Primates are also uniquely encephalized across fetal development, but it remains unclear when this pattern emerges during development and whether it is common to all primate radiations. To reexamine these questions across a wider range of mammalian radiations, data on the primarily fetal rapid growth phase (RGP) of ontogenetic brain-body allometry was compiled for diverse primate (np = 12) and nonprimate (nnp = 16) mammalian species, and was complemented by later ontogenetic data in 16 additional species (np = 9; nnp = 7) as well as neonatal proportions in a much larger sample (np = 38; nnp = 83). Relative BMR, litter size, altriciality, and placental morphology fail to predict RGP slopes as would be expected if physiological and life history variables constrained fetal brain growth, but are associated with differences in birth timing along allometric trajectories. Prenatal encephalization is shared by all primate radiations, is unique to the primate Order, and is characterized by: (1) a robust change in early embryonic brain/body proportions, and (2) higher average RGP allometric slopes due to slower fetal body growth. While high slopes are observed in several nonprimate species, primates alone exhibit an intercept shift at 1 g body size. This suggests that primate prenatal encephalization is a consequence of early changes to embryonic neural and somatic tissue growth in primates that remain poorly understood.
© 2016 S. Karger AG, Basel.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27561684     DOI: 10.1159/000447254

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain Behav Evol        ISSN: 0006-8977            Impact factor:   1.808


  7 in total

1.  Minimal variation in eutherian brain growth rates during fetal neurogenesis.

Authors:  Andrew C Halley
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2017-05-17       Impact factor: 5.349

Review 2.  The Tempo of Mammalian Embryogenesis: Variation in the Pace of Brain and Body Development.

Authors:  Andrew C Halley
Journal:  Brain Behav Evol       Date:  2022-02-21       Impact factor: 1.919

3.  Interspecific comparison of allometry between body weight and chest girth in domestic bovids.

Authors:  Hiroki Anzai; Kazato Oishi; Hajime Kumagai; Eiji Hosoi; Yoshitaka Nakanishi; Hiroyuki Hirooka
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-07-06       Impact factor: 4.379

4.  Postcranial heterochrony, modularity, integration and disparity in the prenatal ossification in bats (Chiroptera).

Authors:  Camilo López-Aguirre; Suzanne J Hand; Daisuke Koyabu; Nguyen Truong Son; Laura A B Wilson
Journal:  BMC Evol Biol       Date:  2019-03-12       Impact factor: 3.260

5.  Protracted neuronal maturation in a long-lived, highly social rodent.

Authors:  Mariela Faykoo-Martinez; Troy Collins; Diana Peragine; Manahil Malik; Fiza Javed; Matthew Kolisnyk; Justine Ziolkowski; Imaan Jeewa; Arthur H Cheng; Christopher Lowden; Brittany Mascarenhas; Hai-Ying Mary Cheng; Melissa M Holmes
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2022-09-15       Impact factor: 3.752

6.  Development of body, head and brain features in the Australian fat-tailed dunnart (Sminthopsis crassicaudata; Marsupialia: Dasyuridae); A postnatal model of forebrain formation.

Authors:  Rodrigo Suárez; Annalisa Paolino; Peter Kozulin; Laura R Fenlon; Laura R Morcom; Robert Englebright; Patricia J O'Hara; Peter J Murray; Linda J Richards
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-09-07       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  Comparing Adult Hippocampal Neurogenesis Across Species: Translating Time to Predict the Tempo in Humans.

Authors:  Christine J Charvet; Barbara L Finlay
Journal:  Front Neurosci       Date:  2018-10-05       Impact factor: 4.677

  7 in total

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