Fuente: University of Zurich – News  Releases
  Expuesto el: martes, 08 de mayo de 2012 9:31
  Autor: Huber Nathalie
  Asunto: Typically human brain development older than first thought
| News    release, May 08, 2012    A    large neonate brain, rapid brain growth and large frontal lobes are the    typical hallmarks of human brain development. These appeared much earlier in the    hominin family tree than was originally thought, as anthropologists from the    University of Zurich who re-examined the Taung child’s fossil cranial sutures    and compared them with other fossil skulls now prove. The late fusion of the    cranial sutures in the Taung child is also found in many other members of the    Australopithecus africanus species and the earliest examples of the Homo    genus. The Australopithecus    child’s skull discovered in Taung in 1924 is an icon of human evolution. Of    the neurocranium, the fossilized sediment filling has survived. The imprints    of the original cerebral gyri on this rock core have fascinated    paleoanthropologists from the outset and triggered much debate on the    evolution of the Australopithecus brain. Fossil cranial sutures    cast in whole new lightThe imprints of the    cranial sutures that are also clearly visible on the rock core had long been    forgotten. Now, anthropologists from the University of Zurich teamed up with    researchers from Florida State University to examine their importance for    brain growth in the Taung child. Sutures are bone growth fronts where the    neurocranium can expand as the brain grows. Once the brain stops growing, the    sutures ossify. The Taung child, who died at about four years of age, has    something unusual: a suture between the two halves of the frontal bone.    According to the research team’s analyses, this so-called metopic suture is    already ossified in most chimpanzees of the Taung child’s age, but often is    not in human children of the same age. Typical brain    development older than thoughtAs the researchers now    demonstrate using computer-imaging comparisons of fossil crania, the late    fusion of the metopic suture in the Taung child is not unique in fossils. It    is also found in many other members of the species Australopithecus    africanus, not to mention the earliest examples of our Homo genus. The three    typical hallmarks of human brain development – a large neonate brain, rapid    brain growth and large frontal lobes – therefore appeared much earlier in the    hominin family tree than was originally thought. Fast-growing brain    behind late fusion “The late fusion of the    metopic suture in humans is linked to our special brain growth,” explains    Marcia Ponce de León, a senior lecturer at the University of Zurich’s Anthropological    Institute. A new-born human’s brain is as big as an adult chimpanzee’s.    Accordingly, the cranium, which is deformed as it passes through the mother’s    pelvis, is also large. This is only possible because all the cranial sutures    are still wide open. After birth, the human brain grows extremely quickly,    especially the large frontal lobes. “The late fusion of the metopic suture    must be directly linked to this,” adds Ponce de León. In chimpanzees, these    problems do not exist. Their neonates’ heads are comparatively small, their    brain growth slows shortly after birth and the frontal lobes are not as    pronounced. Consequently, the metopic suture also ossifies early. Literature:Dean Falk, Christoph P.    Zollikofer, Naoki Morimoto and Marcia S. Ponce de León. Metopic suture of    Taung (Australopithecus africanus) and its implications for hominin brain    evolution. PNAS, 7 May, 2012. doi/10.1073/pnas.1119752109 
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