scholarly journals Decentralized Control Mechanism for Determination of Moving Direction in Brittle Stars With Penta-Radially Symmetric Body

2019 ◽  
Vol 13 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takeshi Kano ◽  
Daichi Kanauchi ◽  
Hitoshi Aonuma ◽  
Elizabeth G. Clark ◽  
Akio Ishiguro
2020 ◽  
Vol 64 (4-5-6) ◽  
pp. 299-318
Author(s):  
Carmen M.A. Coelho

The regulation of growth and the determination of organ-size in animals is an area of research that has received much attention during the past two and a half decades. Classic regeneration and cell-competition studies performed during the last century suggested that for size to be determined, organ-size is sensed and this sense of size feeds back into the growth control mechanism such that growth stops at the “correct” size. Recent work using Drosophila imaginal discs as a system has provided a particularly detailed cellular and molecular understanding of growth. Yet, a clear mechanistic basis for size-sensing has not emerged. I re-examine these studies from a different perspective and ask whether there is scope for alternate modes of size control in which size does not need to be sensed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 60 (1) ◽  
pp. 232-247 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takeshi Kano ◽  
Akio Ishiguro

Abstract Snakes have no limbs and can move in various environments using a simple elongated limbless body structure obtained through a long-term evolutionary process. Specifically, snakes have various locomotion patterns, which they change in response to conditions encountered. For example, on an unstructured terrain, snakes actively utilize the terrain’s irregularities and move effectively by actively pushing their bodies against the “scaffolds” that they encounter. In a narrow aisle, snakes exhibit concertina locomotion, in which the tail part of the body is pulled forward with the head part anchored, and this is followed by the extension of the head part with the tail part anchored. Furthermore, snakes often exhibit three-dimensional (3-D) locomotion patterns wherein the points of ground contact change in a spatiotemporal manner, such as sidewinding and sinus-lifting locomotion. This ability is achieved possibly by a decentralized control mechanism, which is still mostly unknown. In this study, we address this aspect by employing a synthetic approach to understand locomotion mechanisms by developing mathematical models and robots. We propose a Tegotae-based decentralized control mechanism and use a 2-D snake-like robot to demonstrate that it can exhibit scaffold-based and concertina locomotion. Moreover, we extend the proposed mechanism to 3D and use a 3-D snake-like robot to demonstrate that it can exhibit sidewinding and sinus-lifting locomotion. We believe that our findings will form a basis for developing snake-like robots applicable to search-and-rescue operations as well as understanding the essential decentralized control mechanism underlying animal locomotion.


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 (0) ◽  
pp. _2A2-S02_1-_2A2-S02_4
Author(s):  
Tatsuya ONO ◽  
Takeshi KANO ◽  
Hitoshi AONUMA ◽  
Yoshiya MATSUZAKA ◽  
Akio ISHIGURO

Author(s):  
Tatsuya ONO ◽  
Takeshi KANO ◽  
Hitoshi AONUMA ◽  
Yoshiya MATSUZAKA ◽  
Akio ISHIGURO

1994 ◽  
Vol 266 (2) ◽  
pp. C455-C461 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Venerando ◽  
G. Miotto ◽  
M. Kadowaki ◽  
N. Siliprandi ◽  
G. E. Mortimore

Autophagically mediated proteolysis in the perfused rat liver is under complex multiphasic control by a small group of amino acids dominated by leucine. Because there have been no prior reports of such regulation in the isolated hepatocyte, our goal was to determine whether it is a manifestation of interactions between diverse cells in the intact liver or, alternatively, the expression of a unique control mechanism within a single population of cells. Hepatocytes were isolated from livers of ad libitum-fed rats and incubated with cycloheximide at low density (approximately 10(6) cells/ml) for the determination of valine release. As in perfusion experiments with synchronously fed rats, proteolytic responses to leucine in cells from fed rats were mediated through two inhibitory mechanisms that alternated randomly on a day-to-day basis. The first (L) represented a typical multiphasic dose-response with low- and high-concentration inhibition separated by a sharp zonal loss of inhibition that could be abolished by alanine. The second (H) mediated inhibition only at high concentrations. It disappeared after 24 h of starvation, leaving L as the prevailing mode. The findings indicate that both macroautophagy and the multiphasic mechanism for regulating it coexist in a single population of hepatocytes, making the cells suitable for studies aimed at defining the putative plasma membrane site of leucine recognition.


Author(s):  
Corinna Dahm ◽  
Thomas Brey

Growth in ophiuroids is highly variable, and with increasing size and age of an ophiuroid specimen more and more of the innermost growth rings on the vertebral ossicles become overgrown and hence invisible. Two approaches to estimate individual age of slow growing brittle stars using the high Antarctic species Ophionotus victoriae are compared. One method interprets natural growth ring readings as size-increment data, whereas the second method compensates for growth ring overgrowth by means of an iterative corrective approach. Preconditions as well as advantages and disadvantages of both methods are discussed.


1980 ◽  
Vol 86 (2) ◽  
pp. 195-203 ◽  
Author(s):  
O. C. M. PEREIRA ◽  
ZULEIKA P. PICARELLI ◽  
H. HAYASHI

It has been confirmed that cryptorchidism may affect the control mechanism of gonadotrophin secretion. This has been based on morphological aspects of the adenohypophysis of cryptorchid rats which have shown an increase in basophilic and vacuolated basophilic cells, an increase known to be related to the production of gonadotrophin. The morphological alterations observed in the testes, prostates, seminal vesicles and ductus deferentes of these cryptorchid animals, the quiescence and the responses of their seminal vesicles and ductus deferentes to sympathomimetic and parasympathomimetic drugs indicated that these cryptorchid animals may be somewhere between normal and castrated rats, although not equidistant from either. Comparison of wet weights and of occurrence of spontaneous contractions, and determination of drug parameters in seminal vesicles and ductus deferentes taken from normal, castrated or cryptorchid rats, suggested that the development and the spontaneous or the pharmacological responses of male accessory organs of reproduction are independent phenomena.


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