The researchers employed similar techniques to those regularly used to study model organisms, like fruit flies and zebrafish. They created special tools and made use of cutting-edge microscopes that can take high-resolution images every 10 minutes for hours on end to see how individual cells behave. The researchers used florescent dyes to mark the cells so they could map them and track them.

This live-imaging technique allowed the team to observe stem cells called neural progenitor cells and how they are organized. The cells formed a special kind of structure called a pseudostratified epithelium. Its main feature is that the cells are elongated so they can be densely packed. Researchers also saw the nucleus of these structures move up and down before and after dividing. This movement is important for keeping the tissue organized and allowing for continued growth, they said.

This type of structure is universally seen in brain and eye development in vertebrate species. It long has been considered one of the reasons the vertebrate nervous system could grow so large and complex. Scientists have observed examples of this type of neural epithelium in other animals, but the squid tissue was also strikingly similar to that of vertebrates in size, organization, and nucleus movement.

The research was led by Francesca R. Napoli and Christina M. Daly, research assistants in the Koenig Lab.

Next, the lab plans to look at how different cell types in cephalopod brains emerge. Koenig wants to determine whether they’re expressed at different times, how they decide to become one type of neuron versus another, and whether this action is similar across species.

“One of the big takeaways from this type of work is just how valuable it is to study the diversity of life,” Koenig said. “By studying this diversity, you can actually really come back to fundamental ideas about even our own development and our own biomedically relevant questions. You can really speak to those questions.”