Conserved interhemispheric morphogenesis in amniotes preceded the evolution of the corpus callosum

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Abstract

The corpus callosum (CC) is the large axon bundle connecting the telencephalic hemispheres. The CC is formed exclusively in placental mammals, and the lack of comparable structures in other amniotes obscures the evolutionary origin of the CC. We here demonstrate that interhemispheric remodeling, a prior developmental step for CC formation, is highly conserved in non-mammalian amniotes, such as reptiles and birds. In these animal groups, the spatiotemporal dynamics of interhemispheric remodeling are tightly connected with distinct commissural formations. We observed a high degree of similarity between the mammalian CC and reptilian rostral pallial commissure, (RPC) and significant modifications in the avian pallial projection. Furthermore, we determined that Satb2 plays crucial roles in interhemispheric remodeling, which is associated with proper formation of both the CC and RPC in mice and geckoes, via the use of CRISPR-mediated gene-targeting. Our findings suggest that developmental mechanisms for midline remodeling were already present in the common ancestor of amniotes, which contributed to the evolution of eutherian-specific CC formation.

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