Worm Breeder's Gazette 8(2): 31

These abstracts should not be cited in bibliographies. Material contained herein should be treated as personal communication and should be cited as such only with the consent of the author.

A Comparison of the Retrovesicular Ganglion in Ascaris lumbriciodes and C. elegans

J.E. Donmoyer, J.D. Angstadt, and A.O.W. Stretton

Figure 1

The anatomy of the nervous system of the large parasitic nematode 
Ascaris des is similar in many respects to the 
nervous system of C.  elegans.  An adult Ascaris can be as large as 30 
cm and weigh 10 grams while a typical C.  elegans may be 1 mm long and 
weigh a few micrograms.  Yet, both worms have about the same number of 
neurons.  In addition, the nerve cells are arranged in the same basic 
pattern throughout the animals and many of the neurons have similar 
shapes in the two worms.  It has been known for some time, for example,
that motorneurons in the two animals have identical shapes and make 
similar synaptic connections.  On the other hand, homologies between 
interneurons in the two species have been less clear.  In order to 
compare different classes of neurons more fully, we have examined the 
anatomy of the retrovesicular ganglion (RVG) of Ascaris, which 
contains both interneurons and motorneurons.  We find that each RVG 
cell in Ascaris appears to have a homolog in the RVG of C.  elegans.  
The homologies are based on the unpublished reconstructions of head 
neurons by John White.
[see Figure 1]

Figure 1