SPECIES DIFFERENCES IN EARLY PATTERNING OF THE AVIAN BRAIN |
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Authors: | Luke McGowan Eric Kuo Arnaud Martin Edwin S. Monuki Georg Striedter |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Neurobiology and Behavior, University of California, Irvine (UCI), California 92697;2. E‐mail: lukemcgowan1@yahoo.com;3. Biomedical Engineering, UCI, California 92697;4. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, UCI, California 92697;5. Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Developmental and Cell Biology, UCI, California 92697 |
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Abstract: | The telencephalon is proportionately larger in parrots than in galliformes (chicken‐like birds), whereas the midbrain tectum is proportionately smaller. We here test the hypothesis that the adult species difference in midbrain proportion is due to an evolutionary change in early brain patterning. In particular, we compare the size of the early embryonic midbrain between parakeets (Melopsittacus undulatus) and bobwhite quail (Colinus virgianus) by examining the expression domains of transcription factors Pax6 and Gbx2, which are expressed in the forebrain and hindbrain, respectively. Because these expression domains form rostral and caudal borders with the presumptive midbrain when this region is specified (Hamburger‐Hamilton stages 9–11), they allow us to measure and compare the sizes of a molecularly defined presumptive midbrain in the two species. Based on published data from older embryos, we predicted that the molecularly defined midbrain territory is significantly larger in quail than parakeets. Indeed, our data show that normalized midbrain length is 33% greater in quail and that the midbrain to forebrain ratio is 28% greater. This is strong evidence of a significant species difference in early brain patterning. |
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Keywords: | Aves brain evolution brain patterning evo– devo midbrain |
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