Researchers have mapped the physical organisation of the brain of a soil-living nematode worm, creating a new model for the architecture of the animal’s brain.
They found a large degree of variation in the structure of some neural circuits or pathways in individual worms which complemented a core set of neural circuits common to the animals.
This suggests the worm's brain might have a lot more in common with larger animals than previously thought.
The study involved a microscopic nematode species called Caenorhabditis elegans.
The brain map reveals a very elegant structure to support information flow...
Created by neuroscientists at the University of Leeds in collaboration with researchers at New Yorks Albert Einstein College of Medicine, the brain map reveals that spatial regions have specialist roles in routing information - and in integrating information.
The study - A multiscale brain map derived from whole-brain volumetric reconstructions has been published in the scientific journal Nature.
C. elegans are nematodes that feed on bacteria found in rotting vegetation in gardens. They are only around a millimetre in length and as thin as a human hair.
The image shows the different brain regions that process information to direct behaviours such as navigation, avoidance and feeding. The sensors collect information from the nose (top left, not shown) and drive muscles all around the head and down the body(to the bottom right, not shown). Credit: University of Leeds.
An adult worm has exactly 302 cells in its nervous system - by comparison, the human brain has around 100 billion cells. But almost two-thirds of the worms nerve cells form a ring in the head region, where they make thousands of connections with each other.
This brain is the control centre of the animal, where much of the sensing and decision-making takes place.
Even though the brain is very compact, the animal displays a range of complex behaviours, and neuroscientists have been interested in understanding its brain for decades. Previous studies have created wiring diagrams for the connections between nerve cells.
This latest study, though, is the first to provide the complete spatial coordinates to those circuit diagrams.
Professor Netta Cohen, Computational Neuroscientist in the School of Computing at Leeds, who supervised the research, said: The brain needs to organise information flow to control the animals behaviour. But how the structure and function of the brain are related is an open question.
"Providing the spatial representation of the circuitry has allowed us to uncover the modular structure of this animals brain.
Creating the brain map
The researchers used a legacy collection of electron microscope images of the brain of an adult and juvenile nematode worm. Those images revealed individual brain cells or neurons, allowing the researchers to map the organisation of the worms neural circuits, from the level of individual cells through to the larger architecture of the brain.
Structure-function of the brain
They identified known neural circuits and pathways within the brain, such as a navigation neural circuit which an animal would use to follow smells and tastes to forage for food. Another circuit is thought to facilitate mechano-sensation, so it would feel its way as it wriggles through the soil or sense if it is surrounded by bacteria.
The researchers argue that information is processed in the worms brain through a number of layers. In fact, a similar layered architecture is found in the human brain. Information flow starts in sensory cells, which respond to the environment. For example, cells may sense bacteria but are they the right bacteria to feed on - do they smell like the right bacteria? The answer requires information to be integrated from multiple senses before being sent to the command area of the brain for action.
Professor Cohen said: The brain map reveals a very elegant structure to support information flow through a worms brain and it is more sophisticated than the traditional view that simple animals follow a stimulus-response path.
The map suggests a convergence of different neural circuits, and this allows the worm to integrate all of the different cues it is receiving through its sensory cells and to coordinate the response.
Variation in brain structure
During their study, the researchers were surprised to discover the extent of individual variation in the worms brains.
This variable connectivity may support individuality and adaptability of brains as the animals face challenging, dangerous and ever-changing environments.
C. elegans is one of the most studied animals in biology. During the life of the worm, the way its cells divide and grow follows a strict blueprint which is observed across the entire species. But when it comes to the brain cells, there seemed to be a high degree of variation in the way the brain cells formed contacts with neighbouring cells and created neural circuits.
Using mathematical and computer models, the scientists were able to discern between those connections that are likely to form the core circuit and seen in many animals in the species and those that appear to be variable between individuals.
Dr. Christopher Brittin, a former PhD student at the University of Leeds and first author on the paper, said: This work raises interesting questions about how even seemingly simple nervous systems are able to accommodate both core and individualized brain circuitry.
The scientists found that only around half the wiring in the worms brains is similar - the other half showed variation.
Professor Cohen added: This finding was really exciting for us. First, this suggests that worm brains have a lot more in common with the brains of higher animals than we knew or expected, and the lessons learned about worms can help us learn about brains more generally.
Further information
Top image: C. elegans photographed under magnification. Courtesy of the Wellcome Collection. Creative Commons License: Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
The research was financially supported by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (UK) National Institutes of Health (US), NIH/National Institute of Mental Health, G. Harold and Leila Y. Mathers Charitable Foundation.
For further details, please email David Lewis in the press office at the University of Leeds on: d.lewis@leeds.ac.uk