Instinct for 'fight or flight' may be much older than we thought

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Our instinctive 'fight or flight' response to danger was thought to have evolved along with the sympathetic nervous system in backboned animals with a jaw, but US and Czech scientists say its origins may be much older than that. The sympathetic nervous system, which operates without thought, controls fight or flight, and the researchers found a similar setup in lampreys, a group of fish that don't have a jaw. Lampreys have paired bundles of sympathetic nerve cells that span the bodies of their larvae in chains, which the researchers say is basically a rudimentary sympathetic nervous system derived from a structure called the neural crest - made of temporary stem cells that go on to become other body parts in animals. The findings suggest the fight or flight response may have arisen much earlier in evolutionary history than we thought, they conclude.

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From: Springer Nature

The origins of the ‘fight or flight’ system

Evidence in lampreys for the presence of a rudimentary sympathetic nervous system, previously thought to be unique to jawed vertebrates, is presented in Nature this week. The finding may prompt a rethink of the origins of the sympathetic nervous system, which operates without conscious thought and controls the fight or flight reaction.

The sympathetic nervous system is thought to have evolved in jawed vertebrates and — as jawless vertebrates — lampreys were thought to lack one. However, Marianne Bronner and colleagues have discovered paired bundles of sympathetic neurons that span the trunk of the larval sea lamprey in a chain-like arrangement.

This rudimentary sympathetic nervous system is derived from an embryonic structure called the neural crest, they show. The neural crest is a transient population of migratory stem cells that gives rise to many key vertebrate structures. Although many of these features were present in ancestral jawless vertebrates, others — such as jaws and the sympathetic nervous system — are generally thought to have arisen later, in jawed vertebrates. The findings here challenge the view that the sympathetic nervous system arose in jawed vertebrates and highlight the lamprey and other jawless vertebrates as important models for understanding the emergence of complex vertebrate features.

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Organisation/s: California Institute of Technology, USA, Goethe-Universität, Germany
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