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Publication : Precraniate origin of cranial motoneurons.

First Author  Dufour HD Year  2006
Journal  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A Volume  103
Issue  23 Pages  8727-32
PubMed ID  16735475 Mgi Jnum  J:110808
Mgi Id  MGI:3641349 Doi  10.1073/pnas.0600805103
Citation  Dufour HD, et al. (2006) Precraniate origin of cranial motoneurons. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 103(23):8727-32
abstractText  The craniate head is innervated by cranial sensory and motor neurons. Cranial sensory neurons stem from the neurogenic placodes and neural crest and are seen as evolutionary innovations crucial in fulfilling the feeding and respiratory needs of the craniate 'new head.' In contrast, cranial motoneurons that are located in the hindbrain and motorize the head have an unclear phylogenetic status. Here we show that these motoneurons are in fact homologous to the motoneurons of the sessile postmetamorphic form of ascidians. The motoneurons of adult Ciona intestinalis, located in the cerebral ganglion and innervating muscles associated with the huge 'branchial basket,' express the transcription factors CiPhox2 and CiTbx20, whose vertebrate orthologues collectively define cranial motoneurons of the branchiovisceral class. Moreover, Ciona's postmetamorphic motoneurons arise from a hindbrain set aside during larval life and defined as such by its position (caudal to the prosensephalic sensory vesicle) and coexpression of CiPhox2 and CiHox1, whose orthologues collectively mark the vertebrate hindbrain. These data unveil that the postmetamorphic ascidian brain, assumed to be a derived feature, in fact corresponds to the vertebrate hindbrain and push back the evolutionary origin of cranial nerves to before the origin of craniates.
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