Neural crest origin of sympathetic neurons at the dawn of vertebrates
Brittany M. Edens,
Jan Stundl,
Hugo A. Urrutia and
Marianne E. Bronner ()
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Brittany M. Edens: California Institute of Technology
Jan Stundl: California Institute of Technology
Hugo A. Urrutia: California Institute of Technology
Marianne E. Bronner: California Institute of Technology
Nature, 2024, vol. 629, issue 8010, 121-126
Abstract:
Abstract The neural crest is an embryonic stem cell population unique to vertebrates1 whose expansion and diversification are thought to have promoted vertebrate evolution by enabling emergence of new cell types and structures such as jaws and peripheral ganglia2. Although jawless vertebrates have sensory ganglia, convention has it that trunk sympathetic chain ganglia arose only in jawed vertebrates3–8. Here, by contrast, we report the presence of trunk sympathetic neurons in the sea lamprey, Petromyzon marinus, an extant jawless vertebrate. These neurons arise from sympathoblasts near the dorsal aorta that undergo noradrenergic specification through a transcriptional program homologous to that described in gnathostomes. Lamprey sympathoblasts populate the extracardiac space and extend along the length of the trunk in bilateral streams, expressing the catecholamine biosynthetic pathway enzymes tyrosine hydroxylase and dopamine β-hydroxylase. CM-DiI lineage tracing analysis further confirmed that these cells derive from the trunk neural crest. RNA sequencing of isolated ammocoete trunk sympathoblasts revealed gene profiles characteristic of sympathetic neuron function. Our findings challenge the prevailing dogma that posits that sympathetic ganglia are a gnathostome innovation, instead suggesting that a late-developing rudimentary sympathetic nervous system may have been characteristic of the earliest vertebrates.
Date: 2024
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DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-07297-0
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