30 September 2008

Wiring the -ome

NeuronBank is a project I have been offering moral support to, mainly in the form of links here and there around the Marmorkrebs websites I run. The goal of NeuronBank is to compile the "neurome" for organisms, mainly invertebrates.

Most people are familiar with the concept of a genome: the sum total of all the genes in an organism. Since the success of the Human Genome Project, other "-ome" projects have been slowly creeping into scientific awareness. Arguably proteomics is one of the most common new -omes in the scientific news. Neuromes -- a description of all neurons in an animal -- are not in that league yet, but that may start to change.

A forthcoming new review by Lichtman and Sanes in Current Opinion in Neurobiology goes one step further, discussing not only neuromes, but connectomes: a description of not only all the neurons in a nervous system, but their anatomical and physiological connections, too.

If that sounds difficult, it is, but it's already been done in one animal: the little nematode worm C. elegans. The C. elegans project is discussed in some detail -- which it has to be, seeing how it's the only animal in the connections between all 302 neurons in the wild-type animal has been described.

While there is no complete neurome or connectome for a crustacean, there are neuromes and connectomes for parts of crustacean nervous systems. The stomatogastric ganglion in several species has about 30 neurons, and all the neurons and all the connections in the stomatogastric ganglion are known for some crabs and lobsters, thanks largely to work in Allen Selverston's lab. This has led to a massive amount of research on the stomatogastric ganglion. Literally entire books have been written on the subject (Harris-Warrick, 1992; a PDF of the first chapter is available here).

The crustacean cardiac ganglion, which usually has 9 neurons, may also have a complete circuit worked out for it, though I have been unable to confirm this in writing this post. In any case, it is well characterized (Cook, 2002).

But are other parts of the crustacean nervous system amenable to compiling a even a partial neurome, never mind a connectome? I think so, and suggest crayfish abdominal ganglia are ripe for creating a neurome.

Crayfish abdominal ganglion by RetziusThe tail of a crayfish contains six clusters of nerve cells (a.k.a. ganglia). The first five from the front are very similar, and only the very last one, the terminal abdominal ganglion, is substantially different than the others. The abdominal ganglia of crayfish are widely used for electrophysiology, because the dissection is very simple. Wine (1984) estimated that there are about 650 neurons in each of the first five abdominal ganglia.

650 is not that big a number of neurons. And a reasonable number of them are already described. Given a few dedicated labs, creating a neurome for these ganglia seems at least feasible.

In one of my earliest posts on this blog: Every major model organism has earned that rank on the back of a massive descriptive project. I've already said there should be a crayfish genome project; a crayfish neurome project should be in the works, too.

References

Cooke IM. 2002. Reliable, responsive pacemaking and pattern generation with minimal cell numbers: the crustacean cardiac ganglion. The Biological Bulletin 202: 108-136. http://www.biolbull.org/cgi/content/full/202/2/108

Harris-Warrick RM, Marder E, Selverston AI, Moulins M (eds.). 1992. Dynamic Biological Networks: The Stomatogastric Nervous System. Cambridge: MIT Press.

Lichtman JW & Sanes JR. 2008. Ome sweet ome: what can the genome tell us about the connectome? Current Opinion in Neurobiology: In press. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.conb.2008.08.010

Wine JJ. 1984. The structural basis of an innate behavioural pattern. The Journal of Experimental Biology 112: 283-319. http://jeb.biologists.org/cgi/content/abstract/112/1/283

24 September 2008

Men only

Men Only magazineMarmorkrebs are interesting partly because of their parthenogenesis. But if the idea of a on sex species seems strange when it's a female, you ain't seen nothin' yet. The always entertaining Olivia Judson has a column up in the New York Times about a different kind of parthenogenesis: the kind where only the males' genes get into the next generation.

09 September 2008

Pic of the moment: 9 September 2008


The feather-like plumes on the side of this animal's carapace are actually her gills. It seems the gills somehow got stuck on the outside of her carapace during molting. It's unusual looking, but apparently not terribly harmful, as this individual is generally continuing to show good health.

Photo by Zen Faulkes.

02 September 2008

Laws and claws

GavelIn hopping around some of the forums where Marmorkrebs have been mentioned, a recurring question has come up about the laws on keeping and shipping crayfish. Is is legal to have Marmorekrebs, to ship them to another country, and so on.

I don't know. I've seen some comments that in the U.S., the rules about importing and keeping crayfish vary from state to state. I haven't done an exhaustive search on this, but it's come up a few times, so I think I may have to do it sometime soon.

Second, this is one of those times where science moves faster than law. This actually happens fairly often. A particularly interesting example was when a court had to rule on whether whales were fish. Marmorkrebs weren't known to science until a few years ago, still doesn't have a proper species name, still not known if it exists in the wild (other than where it has been introduced). I imagine that makes it sort of difficult to draft laws concerning it. But the law usually catches up...