1. Complete persistence of the primary somatosensory system in zebrafish.
- Author
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Navajas Acedo J
- Subjects
- Animals, Ganglia, Spinal embryology, Neurons physiology, Neural Crest cytology, Neural Crest embryology, Neural Crest physiology, Zebrafish embryology
- Abstract
The somatosensory system detects peripheral stimuli that are translated into behaviors necessary for survival. Fishes and amphibians possess two somatosensory systems in the trunk: the primary somatosensory system, formed by the Rohon-Beard neurons, and the secondary somatosensory system, formed by the neural crest cell-derived neurons of the Dorsal Root Ganglia. Rohon-Beard neurons have been characterized as a transient population that mostly disappears during the first days of life and is functionally replaced by the Dorsal Root Ganglia. Here, I follow Rohon-Beard neurons in vivo and show that the entire repertoire remains present in zebrafish from 1-day post-fertilization until the juvenile stage, 15-days post-fertilization. These data indicate that zebrafish retain two complete somatosensory systems until at least a developmental stage when the animals display complex behavioral repertoires., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest I declare I do not have any competing interests., (Copyright © 2024 The Author. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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