An ancestral axial twist explains the contralateral forebrain and the optic chiasm in vertebrates
Marc H.E. de Lussanet, Jan W.M. Osse

TL;DR
This paper proposes that an ancestral axial twist in vertebrates explains the contralateral organization of the forebrain and optic chiasm, supported by developmental observations and a predictive model, offering new evolutionary insights.
Contribution
It introduces the axial twist hypothesis as a novel explanation for brain asymmetry and predicts specific anatomical features, supported by developmental data and modeling.
Findings
Developmental migrations in zebrafish and chick support the hypothesis.
Model predicts ventral optic chiasm and uncrossed olfactory tract.
Explains various asymmetries in vertebrate anatomy.
Abstract
Among the best-known facts of the brain are the contralateral visual, auditory, sensational, and motor mappings in the forebrain. How and why did these evolve? The few theories to this question provide functional answers, such as better networks for visuomotor control. However, these theories contradict the data, as discussed here. Instead we propose that a 90-deg left-turn around the body-axis evolved in a common ancestor of all vertebrates. Compensatory migrations of the tissues during development restore body symmetry. Eyes, nostrils and forebrain compensate in the direction of the turn, whereas more caudal structures migrate in the opposite direction. As a result of these opposite migrations the forebrain becomes crossed and inverted with respect to the rest of the nervous system. We show that these compensatory migratory movements can indeed be observed in the zebrafish (Danio…
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