Ronin Institute, Montclair, New Jersey, United States of America.
PLoS Biol. 2014 Feb 25;12(2):e1001800. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.1001800. eCollection 2014 Feb.
Mammalian development involves significant interactions between offspring and mother. But is this interaction a carefully coordinated effort by two individuals with a common goal--offspring survival? Or is it an evolutionary battleground (a central idea in our understanding of reproduction). The conflict between parents and offspring extends to an offspring's genes, where paternally inherited genes favor demanding more from the mother, while maternally inherited genes favor restraint. This "intragenomic conflict" (among genes within a genome) is the dominant evolutionary explanation for "genomic imprinting." But a new study in PLOS Biology provides support for a different perspective: that imprinting might facilitate coordination between mother and offspring. According to this "coadaptation theory," paternally inherited genes might be inactivated because maternally inherited genes are adapted to function harmoniously with the mother. As discussed in this article, the growth effects associated with the imprinted gene Grb10 are consistent with this idea, but it remains to be seen just how general the pattern is.
哺乳动物的发育涉及后代和母亲之间的重要相互作用。但是,这种相互作用是两个具有共同目标(后代生存)的个体之间精心协调的努力吗?还是这是一个进化的战场(我们对生殖理解的一个核心观点)?父母和后代之间的冲突延伸到后代的基因,其中父系遗传的基因倾向于对母亲提出更高的要求,而母系遗传的基因则倾向于克制。这种“基因组内冲突”(基因组内的基因之间)是“基因组印记”的主要进化解释。但是,PLOS 生物学中的一项新研究为一个不同的观点提供了支持:印记可能有助于协调母亲和后代之间的关系。根据这个“协同适应理论”,父系遗传的基因可能会失活,因为母系遗传的基因适应与母亲和谐地发挥作用。正如本文所讨论的,与印记基因 Grb10 相关的生长效应符合这一观点,但这种模式的普遍性还有待观察。