クモとその近縁種が海で誕生したことを示唆する小さな化石(Tiny fossil suggests spiders and their relatives originated in the sea)

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2025-07-22 アリゾナ大学

約5億年前の節足動物「Mollisonia symmetrica」の化石から、クモやサソリなどクモ形類と類似した神経構造が発見され、これらの祖先が海に起源を持つ可能性が示されました。アリゾナ大学などの研究により、現生クモの神経系と一致する脳構造や神経配線が確認され、従来の「陸上起源説」に代わる「海棲起源説」が支持されました。この発見は、節足動物の進化や脳の発達に関する理解を大きく更新する成果です。

<関連情報>

クモの脳の起源はカンブリア紀? Cambrian origin of the arachnid brain

Nicholas J. Strausfeld ∙ David R. Andrew and ∙ Frank Hirth
Current Biology  Published:April 2, 2025
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2025.06.063

Graphical abstract

クモとその近縁種が海で誕生したことを示唆する小さな化石(Tiny fossil suggests spiders and their relatives originated in the sea)

Highlights

  • Fossil neural traces of the mid-Cambrian Mollisonia are reconstructed
  • Mollisonia is characterized by a backward-folded unsegmented brain
  • Its prosomal nervous system corresponds to that of living spiders and scorpions
  • Phylogenetic analysis of neural traits reveals Mollisonia as an upper stem arachnid

Summary

Fossils from the lower Cambrian provide crucial insights into the diversification of arthropod lineages: Mandibulata, represented by centipedes, insects, and crustaceans; Chelicerata, represented by sea spiders, horseshoe crabs, and arachnids—the last including spiders, scorpions, and ticks.1 Two mid-Cambrian genera claimed as stem chelicerates are Mollisonia and Sanctacaris, defined by a carapaced prosoma equipped with clustered limbs, followed by a segmented trunk opisthosoma equipped with appendages for swimming and respiration.2,3,4 Until now, the phyletic status of Mollisoniidae and Sanctacarididae has been that of a basal chelicerate,2 stemward of Leanchoiliidae, whose neuromorphology resembles that of extant Merostomata (horseshoe crabs).5 Here, we identify preserved traces of neuronal tissues in Mollisonia symmetrica that crucially depart from a merostome organization. Instead, a radiating organization of metameric neuropils occupying most of its prosoma is situated behind a pair of oval unsegmented neuropils that are directly connected to paired chelicerae extending from the front of the prosoma. This connection identifies this neuropil pair as the deutocerebrum and signals a complete reversal of the order of the three genetically distinct domains that define euarthropod brains.6 In Mollisonia, the deutocerebrum is the most rostral cerebral domain. The proso- and protocerebral domains are folded backward such that tracts from the principal eyes extend caudally to reach their prosocerebral destination, itself having the unique disposition to interact directly with appendicular neuromeres. Phylogenetic analyses employing predominantly neural traits reveal Mollisonia symmetrica as an upper stem arachnid belonging to a lineage from which may have evolved the planet’s most successful arthropodan predators.

生物工学一般
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