About this Research Topic
Understanding the specific adaptations of larval nervous systems requires an understanding of basic developmental processes such as cell migration, proliferation, and differentiation. In several species, the larval stages are still understudied and many questions about the development, physiology, and morphology of their nervous systems remain unanswered. Furthermore, comparisons of larval nervous systems among different animal species can be highly useful for reconstructing how the nervous systems evolved under similar or different selection pressures. The advancement of our understanding of larval nervous systems greatly benefits from newly available methods, such as single-cell transcriptomic analyses and CRISPR/Cas9 gene manipulations, but also from the increasing possibilities to raise non-model species in the lab for better or initial characterization.
This collection invites studies analyzing individual neurons or the entire nervous system of animals during the larval stages of their life. We plan to highlight a variety of species, including larvae that generate a largely adult nervous system as well as animals in which the larval nervous system will be replaced with new adult structures, since this emphasizes diverse solutions to similar problems in different animal species. Examples of research areas that could contribute to this collection include:
• Comparative phylogenetic analyses of larval neurons/ nervous systems
• Studies of the transition from larval to adult nervous system (retained vs. remodeled nervous systems)
• Gene expression analyses of larval nervous systems
• Functional analyses of developing neurons
• Analyses of neuronal migratory behavior
• Larval behavior analyses based on neuronal manipulation
• Morphological or physiological analyses of larval neurons/ nervous system
• Comparisons of larval nervous systems between non-model and model organisms
• Analyses of non-model organism larval nervous system
Keywords: neurodevelopment, physiological processes, Nervous system, Larval stages
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.