Martínez-Abadías Neus, Mitteroecker Philipp, Parsons Trish E, Esparza Mireia, Sjøvold Torstein, Rolian Campbell, Richtsmeier Joan T, Hallgrímsson Benedikt
Department of Anthropology, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA USA ; CRG, Center for Genomic Regulation, Dr. Aiguader, 88, 08003 Barcelona, Spain.
Evol Biol. 2012 Dec;39(4):554-567. doi: 10.1007/s11692-012-9210-7. Epub 2012 Nov 20.
The human skull is a complex and highly integrated structure that has long held the fascination of anthropologists and evolutionary biologists. Recent studies of the genetics of craniofacial variation reveal a very complex and multifactorial picture. These findings contrast with older ideas that posit much simpler developmental bases for variation in cranial morphology such as the growth of the brain or the growth of the chondrocranium relative to the dermatocranium. Such processes have been shown to have major effects on cranial morphology in mice. It is not known, however, whether they are relevant to explaining normal phenotypic variation in humans. To answer this question, we obtained vectors of shape change from mutant mouse models in which the developmental basis for the craniofacial phenotype is known to varying degrees, and compared these to a homologous dataset constructed from human crania obtained from a single population with a known genealogy. Our results show that the shape vectors associated with perturbations to chondrocranial growth, brain growth, and body size in mice do largely correspond to axes of covariation in humans. This finding supports the view that the developmental basis for craniofacial variation funnels down to a relatively small number of key developmental processes that are similar across mice and humans. Understanding these processes and how they influence craniofacial shape provides fundamental insights into the developmental basis for evolutionary change in the human skull as well as the developmental-genetic basis for normal phenotypic variation in craniofacial form.
人类头骨是一个复杂且高度整合的结构,长期以来一直吸引着人类学家和进化生物学家。最近关于颅面变异遗传学的研究揭示了一幅非常复杂且多因素的图景。这些发现与早期观点形成对比,早期观点认为颅面形态变异的发育基础要简单得多,比如大脑的生长或软骨颅相对于膜性颅的生长。这些过程已被证明对小鼠的颅面形态有重大影响。然而,尚不清楚它们是否与解释人类正常表型变异相关。为了回答这个问题,我们从颅面表型发育基础在不同程度上已知的突变小鼠模型中获得了形状变化向量,并将其与从具有已知谱系的单一种群的人类颅骨构建的同源数据集进行比较。我们的结果表明,与小鼠软骨颅生长、大脑生长和体型扰动相关的形状向量在很大程度上确实与人类的协变轴相对应。这一发现支持了这样一种观点,即颅面变异的发育基础归结为相对较少的关键发育过程,这些过程在小鼠和人类中是相似的。理解这些过程以及它们如何影响颅面形状,为人类头骨进化变化的发育基础以及颅面形态正常表型变异的发育遗传基础提供了基本见解。