Nociceptive Biology of Molluscs and Arthropods: Evolutionary Clues About Functions and Mechanisms Potentially Related to Pain.

Front Physiol

Department of Integrative Biology and Pharmacology, McGovern Medical School, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston, TX, United States.

Published: August 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • Research on pain-related processes in mollusks and arthropods reveals how these species have adapted to traumatic injuries over millions of years, showing convergent evolution in their adaptive behaviors and physiological responses.
  • Primary nociceptors in species like gastropods and insects have been key in studying nociceptive sensitization, linking these mechanisms to aversive memory and pain sensitivity in both invertebrates and mammals.
  • While studies on different species like moth larvae and squid indicate varied mechanisms of nociceptive sensitization, many molecular components overlap with those found in mammalian pain pathways, highlighting evolutionary connections.

Article Abstract

Important insights into the selection pressures and core molecular modules contributing to the evolution of pain-related processes have come from studies of nociceptive systems in several molluscan and arthropod species. These phyla, and the chordates that include humans, last shared a common ancestor approximately 550 million years ago. Since then, animals in these phyla have continued to be subject to traumatic injury, often from predators, which has led to similar adaptive behaviors (e.g., withdrawal, escape, recuperative behavior) and physiological responses to injury in each group. Comparisons across these taxa provide clues about the contributions of convergent evolution and of conservation of ancient adaptive mechanisms to general nociceptive and pain-related functions. Primary nociceptors have been investigated extensively in a few molluscan and arthropod species, with studies of long-lasting nociceptive sensitization in the gastropod, , and the insect, , being especially fruitful. In , nociceptive sensitization has been investigated as a model for aversive memory and for hyperalgesia. Neuromodulator-induced, activity-dependent, and axotomy-induced plasticity mechanisms have been defined in synapses, cell bodies, and axons of primary nociceptors. Studies of nociceptive sensitization in larvae have revealed numerous molecular contributors in primary nociceptors and interacting cells. Interestingly, molecular contributors examined thus far in and are largely different, but both sets overlap extensively with those in mammalian pain-related pathways. In contrast to results from and , nociceptive sensitization examined in moth larvae () disclosed central hyperactivity but no obvious peripheral sensitization of nociceptive responses. Squid () show injury-induced sensitization manifested as behavioral hypersensitivity to tactile and especially visual stimuli, and as hypersensitivity and spontaneous activity in nociceptor terminals. Temporary blockade of nociceptor activity during injury subsequently increased mortality when injured squid were exposed to fish predators, providing the first demonstration in any animal of the adaptiveness of nociceptive sensitization. Immediate responses to noxious stimulation and nociceptive sensitization have also been examined behaviorally and physiologically in a snail (), octopus (), crayfish (), hermit crab (), and shore crab (). Molluscs and arthropods have systems that suppress nociceptive responses, but whether opioid systems play antinociceptive roles in these phyla is uncertain.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6085516PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2018.01049DOI Listing

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