| Literature DB >> 35867761 |
Joshua Orvis1, Caroline B Albertin2, Pragya Shrestha3, Shuangshuang Chen3, Melanie Zheng3, Cheyenne J Rodriguez2, Luke J Tallon1, Anup Mahurkar1, Aleksey V Zimin4, Michelle Kim5, Kelvin Liu5, Eric R Kandel6,7,8, Claire M Fraser1, Wayne Sossin9, Thomas W Abrams3,10.
Abstract
The gastropod mollusk Aplysia is an important model for cellular and molecular neurobiological studies, particularly for investigations of molecular mechanisms of learning and memory. We developed an optimized assembly pipeline to generate an improved Aplysia nervous system transcriptome. This improved transcriptome enabled us to explore the evolution of cognitive capacity at the molecular level. Were there evolutionary expansions of neuronal genes between this relatively simple gastropod Aplysia (20,000 neurons) and Octopus (500 million neurons), the invertebrate with the most elaborate neuronal circuitry and greatest behavioral complexity? Are the tremendous advances in cognitive power in vertebrates explained by expansion of the synaptic proteome that resulted from multiple rounds of whole genome duplication in this clade? Overall, the complement of genes linked to neuronal function is similar between Octopus and Aplysia. As expected, a number of synaptic scaffold proteins have more isoforms in humans than in Aplysia or Octopus. However, several scaffold families present in mollusks and other protostomes are absent in vertebrates, including the Fifes, Lev10s, SOLs, and a NETO family. Thus, whereas vertebrates have more scaffold isoforms from select families, invertebrates have additional scaffold protein families not found in vertebrates. This analysis provides insights into the evolution of the synaptic proteome. Both synaptic proteins and synaptic plasticity evolved gradually, yet the last deuterostome-protostome common ancestor already possessed an elaborate suite of genes associated with synaptic function, and critical for synaptic plasticity.Entities:
Keywords: Aplysia; evolution; neural plasticity; neuromodulation; synaptic plasticity
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35867761 PMCID: PMC9282427 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2122301119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 12.779