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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
According to the literature, the cuttlefish, Sepia officinalis, possesses a specialized olfactory organ and cells, located
in olfactory ventral pits. In this study, the location of olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs) at the cellular level was determined
using cellular morphology and immunohistochemistry. An antiserum against PBP3 was used as a marker to
identify ORN-like cells in cuttlefish after validation for specificity to cephalopod ORN cells in the common octopus,
Octopus vulgaris. The results show that ORN-like cells in S. officinalis were not found in the ventral pits, suckers or
the mouth lips. Instead, ORN-like cells were found scattered in the forehead, between the eyes. The absence of ORNlike
cells in a pit in S. officinalis and the sharing of four similar types of ORN cells with the squid and octopus lineages
suggest that this might be a later innovation in olfaction and is probably associated with the specialized lifestyle
of these later evolved cephalopods. Together, this evidence suggests a diversification of ORN cell types in Coleoidea,
which did not occur in Nautiloidea, which might have preceded the diversification of the Coleoidea.
Description
Keywords
Cellular morphology Cephalopod European cuttlefish Sepia officinalis Olfaction Olfactory receptor neurons (ORNs)
Pedagogical Context
Citation
Publisher
Linnean Society of London
