論文

査読有り 国際誌
2022年12月

Potential contribution of intrinsic developmental stability toward body plan conservation

BMC Biology
  • Yui Uchida
  • ,
  • Shuji Shigenobu
  • ,
  • Hiroyuki Takeda
  • ,
  • Chikara Furusawa
  • ,
  • Naoki Irie

20
1
開始ページ
82
終了ページ
82
記述言語
英語
掲載種別
研究論文(学術雑誌)
DOI
10.1186/s12915-022-01276-5
出版者・発行元
Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Abstract

Background

Despite the morphological diversity of animals, their basic anatomical patterns—the body plans in each animal phylum—have remained highly conserved over hundreds of millions of evolutionary years. This is attributed to conservation of the body plan-establishing developmental period (the phylotypic period) in each lineage. However, the evolutionary mechanism behind this phylotypic period conservation remains under debate. A variety of hypotheses based on the concept of modern synthesis have been proposed, such as negative selection in the phylotypic period through its vulnerability to embryonic lethality. Here we tested a new hypothesis that the phylotypic period is developmentally stable; it has less potential to produce phenotypic variations than the other stages, and this has most likely led to the evolutionary conservation of body plans.

Results

By analyzing the embryos of inbred Japanese medaka embryos raised under the same laboratory conditions and measuring the whole embryonic transcriptome as a phenotype, we found that the phylotypic period has greater developmental stability than other stages. Comparison of phenotypic differences between two wild medaka populations indicated that the phylotypic period and its genes in this period remained less variational, even after environmental and mutational modifications accumulated during intraspecies evolution. Genes with stable expression levels were enriched with those involved in cell-cell signalling and morphological specification such as Wnt and Hox, implying possible involvement in body plan development of these genes.

Conclusions

This study demonstrated the correspondence between the developmental stage with low potential to produce phenotypic variations and that with low diversity in micro- and macroevolution, namely the phylotypic period. Whereas modern synthesis explains evolution as a process of shaping of phenotypic variations caused by mutations, our results highlight the possibility that phenotypic variations are readily limited by the intrinsic nature of organisms, namely developmental stability, thus biasing evolutionary outcomes.

リンク情報
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12915-022-01276-5
PubMed
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35399082
PubMed Central
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8996622
URL
https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1186/s12915-022-01276-5.pdf
URL
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12915-022-01276-5/fulltext.html
ID情報
  • DOI : 10.1186/s12915-022-01276-5
  • eISSN : 1741-7007
  • PubMed ID : 35399082
  • PubMed Central 記事ID : PMC8996622

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