Wilkins Adam S
BioEssays Editorial Office, 10/11 Tredgold Lane, Napier Street, Cambridge CB1 1HN, UK.
Bioessays. 2004 Feb;26(2):116-9. doi: 10.1002/bies.10414.
The power of sexual selection to influence the evolution of morphological traits was first proposed more than 130 years ago by Darwin. Though long a controversial idea, it has been documented in recent decades for a host of animal species. Yet few of the established sexually selected features have been explored at the level of their genetic or molecular foundations. In a recent report, Zauner et al.1 describe some of the molecular features associated with one of the best characterized of sexually selected traits, the male-specific tail "sword" seen in certain species of the fish genus Xiphophorus. Zauner et al. find that the msxC gene, a gene previously implicated in fin development from work in zebrafish, is dramatically and specifically upregulated in the development of the ventral caudal fin rays, which give rise to the sword, in males. The results provide the first molecular insight into the development of this sexually selected trait while prompting new questions about the structure of the entire genetic network that underlies this trait. To fully understand the molecular-genetic and evolutionary history of this network, however, it will be essential to determine whether sword-development is a basal or derived trait in Xiphophorus.
130多年前,达尔文首次提出性选择影响形态特征进化的观点。尽管长期以来这一观点存在争议,但近几十年来,已在许多动物物种中得到证实。然而,在已确定的性选择特征中,很少有从基因或分子基础层面进行探究的。在最近的一份报告中,佐纳等人描述了一些与性选择特征中最具代表性的特征之一相关的分子特征,即在剑尾鱼属某些物种中出现的雄性特有的尾部“剑”。佐纳等人发现,msxC基因(一种先前通过斑马鱼研究表明与鳍发育有关的基因)在雄性腹侧尾鳍鳍条(即形成剑的部位)的发育过程中显著且特异性地上调。这些结果首次从分子层面揭示了这种性选择特征的发育过程,同时也引发了关于构成该特征的整个基因网络结构的新问题。然而,要全面了解这个网络的分子遗传和进化历史,确定剑的发育在剑尾鱼属中是一个基础特征还是衍生特征至关重要。