Center for Molecular Medicine and Genetics, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, Michigan, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2011;6(9):e24509. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0024509. Epub 2011 Sep 16.
Preterm birth is a leading cause of perinatal mortality, yet the evolutionary history of this obstetrical syndrome is largely unknown in nonhuman primate species.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We examined the length of gestation during pregnancies that occurred in a captive chimpanzee colony by inspecting veterinary and behavioral records spanning a total of thirty years. Upon examination of these records we were able to confidently estimate gestation length for 93 of the 97 (96%) pregnancies recorded at the colony. In total, 78 singleton gestations resulted in live birth, and from these pregnancies we estimated the mean gestation length of normal chimpanzee pregnancies to be 228 days, a finding consistent with other published reports. We also calculated that the range of gestation in normal chimpanzee pregnancies is approximately forty days. Of the remaining fifteen pregnancies, only one of the offspring survived, suggesting viability for chimpanzees requires a gestation of approximately 200 days. These fifteen pregnancies constitute spontaneous abortions and preterm deliveries, for which the upper gestational age limit was defined as 2 SD from the mean length of gestation (208 days).
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The present study documents that preterm birth occurred within our study population of captive chimpanzees. As in humans, pregnancy loss is not uncommon in chimpanzees, In addition, our findings indicate that both humans and chimpanzees show a similar range of normal variation in gestation length, suggesting this was the case at the time of their last common ancestor (LCA). Nevertheless, our data suggest that whereas chimpanzees' normal gestation length is ∼20-30 days after reaching viability, humans' normal gestation length is approximately 50 days beyond the estimated date of viability without medical intervention. Future research using a comparative evolutionary framework should help to clarify the extent to which mechanisms at work in normal and preterm parturition are shared in these species.
早产是围产期死亡的主要原因,但在非人类灵长类动物中,这种产科综合征的进化史在很大程度上尚不清楚。
方法/主要发现:我们通过检查兽医和行为记录,检查了一个圈养黑猩猩群体中发生的妊娠的妊娠期长度,这些记录总共跨越了三十年。在检查这些记录后,我们能够自信地估计该群体中记录的 97 次妊娠中的 93 次妊娠的妊娠期长度。总共 78 次单胎妊娠导致活产,从这些妊娠中,我们估计正常黑猩猩妊娠的平均妊娠期长度为 228 天,这一发现与其他已发表的报告一致。我们还计算出正常黑猩猩妊娠的妊娠期范围约为四十天。在其余的十五次妊娠中,只有一个后代存活,这表明黑猩猩的生存能力需要大约 200 天的妊娠期。这十五次妊娠构成了自然流产和早产,其自然流产和早产的上限妊娠年龄定义为平均妊娠长度的 2SD(208 天)。
结论/意义:本研究记录了在我们的圈养黑猩猩研究人群中发生了早产。与人类一样,妊娠丢失在黑猩猩中并不罕见。此外,我们的发现表明,人类和黑猩猩在妊娠期长度的正常变异范围内相似,这表明在它们的最后共同祖先(LCA)时期就是如此。然而,我们的数据表明,虽然黑猩猩的正常妊娠期在达到存活能力后约为 20-30 天,但如果没有医疗干预,人类的正常妊娠期长度在估计的存活日期后大约 50 天。使用比较进化框架的未来研究应该有助于阐明在这些物种中,正常和早产分娩的机制在多大程度上是共享的。