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    What Determines Motor Neuron Number? Slow Scaling of Facial Motor Neuron Numbers with Body Mass in Marsupials and Primates

    Access Status
    Open access via publisher
    Authors
    Watson, Charles
    Provis, J.
    Herculano-Houzel, S.
    Date
    2012
    Type
    Journal Article
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Citation
    Watson, Charles and Provis, Jan and Herculano-Houzel, Suzana. 2012. What Determines Motor Neuron Number? Slow Scaling of Facial Motor Neuron Numbers with Body Mass in Marsupials and Primates. The Anatomical Record. 295 (10): pp. 1683-1691.
    Source Title
    The Anatomical Record
    DOI
    10.1002/ar.22547
    ISSN
    19328494
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/48226
    Collection
    • Curtin Research Publications
    Abstract

    How does the number of motor neurons in the brain correlate with the muscle mass to be controlled in the body? Numbers of motor neurons are known to be adjusted during development by cell death, but the change in the percentage of surviving motor neurons in response to experimental changes in target muscle mass is relatively small. Here we address the quantitative matching between final numbers of motor neurons in the facial nucleus and body mass (which we use as a proxy for the muscle mass). In 22 marsupial species, we found that the number of facial motor neurons is strongly correlated with body mass, and scales across species as a power function of body mass with a very small exponent of 0.184, which is close to the exponent found in primates from previously published data. With such an exponent, doubling the body mass is accompanied by a modest increase of only 14% in numbers of facial motor neurons, while halving body mass results in a decrease of only 12%. These numbers are remarkably similar to the 15-20% increase or 8% decrease in the number of spinal cord motor neurons that results from experimental or natural doubling or reducing by half the target muscle field of birds and amphibians. The scaling rule presented here might thus account for the quantitative matching of motor neurons to their target muscle mass in evolution. With this small scaling exponent, our data also raise the possibility that larger animals will have larger motor units.

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