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Mushroom bodies in crustaceans: Insect-like organization in the caridid shrimp Lebbeus groenlandicus.

Marcel Ethan SayreNicholas James Strausfeld
Published in: The Journal of comparative neurology (2019)
Paired centers in the forebrain of insects, called the mushroom bodies, have become the most investigated brain region of any invertebrate due to novel genetic strategies that relate unique morphological attributes of these centers to their functional roles in learning and memory. Mushroom bodies possessing all the morphological attributes of those in dicondylic insects have been identified in mantis shrimps, basal hoplocarid crustaceans that are sister to Eumalacostraca, the most species-rich group of Crustacea. However, unless other examples of mushroom bodies can be identified in Eumalacostraca, the possibility is that mushroom body-like centers may have undergone convergent evolution in Hoplocarida and are unique to this crustacean lineage. Here, we provide evidence that speaks against convergent evolution, describing in detail the paired mushroom bodies in the lateral protocerebrum of a decapod crustacean, Lebbeus groenlandicus, a species belonging to the infraorder Caridea, an ancient lineage of Eumalacostraca.
Keyphrases
  • single cell
  • minimally invasive
  • gene expression
  • copy number
  • zika virus
  • atomic force microscopy
  • functional connectivity
  • high speed