Goswami Anjali, Binder Wendy J, Meachen Julie, O'Keefe F Robin
Department of Genetics, Evolution & Environment and Department of Earth Sciences, University College London, London WC1E 6BT, United Kingdom;
Department of Biology, Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles, CA 90045;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2015 Apr 21;112(16):4891-6. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1403667112.
Variation is the raw material for natural selection, but the factors shaping variation are still poorly understood. Genetic and developmental interactions can direct variation, but there has been little synthesis of these effects with the extrinsic factors that can shape biodiversity over large scales. The study of phenotypic integration and modularity has the capacity to unify these aspects of evolutionary study by estimating genetic and developmental interactions through the quantitative analysis of morphology, allowing for combined assessment of intrinsic and extrinsic effects. Data from the fossil record in particular are central to our understanding of phenotypic integration and modularity because they provide the only information on deep-time developmental and evolutionary dynamics, including trends in trait relationships and their role in shaping organismal diversity. Here, we demonstrate the important perspective on phenotypic integration provided by the fossil record with a study of Smilodon fatalis (saber-toothed cats) and Canis dirus (dire wolves). We quantified temporal trends in size, variance, phenotypic integration, and direct developmental integration (fluctuating asymmetry) through 27,000 y of Late Pleistocene climate change. Both S. fatalis and C. dirus showed a gradual decrease in magnitude of phenotypic integration and an increase in variance and the correlation between fluctuating asymmetry and overall integration through time, suggesting that developmental integration mediated morphological response to environmental change in the later populations of these species. These results are consistent with experimental studies and represent, to our knowledge, the first deep-time validation of the importance of developmental integration in stabilizing morphological evolution through periods of environmental change.
变异是自然选择的原材料,但塑造变异的因素仍知之甚少。基因和发育相互作用可以引导变异,但这些效应与能够在大尺度上塑造生物多样性的外在因素之间几乎没有综合研究。表型整合与模块性的研究有能力通过对形态进行定量分析来估计基因和发育相互作用,从而统一进化研究的这些方面,实现对内在和外在效应的综合评估。特别是来自化石记录的数据对于我们理解表型整合与模块性至关重要,因为它们提供了关于长期发育和进化动态的唯一信息,包括性状关系的趋势及其在塑造生物多样性中的作用。在此,我们通过对致命剑齿虎(Smilodon fatalis)和恐狼(Canis dirus)的研究,展示了化石记录为表型整合提供的重要视角。我们通过晚更新世27000年的气候变化,量化了体型、方差、表型整合以及直接发育整合(波动不对称性)的时间趋势。致命剑齿虎和恐狼都表现出表型整合程度逐渐降低,方差增加,并且波动不对称性与整体整合之间的相关性随时间增加,这表明发育整合介导了这些物种后期种群对环境变化的形态学响应。这些结果与实验研究一致,据我们所知,这是首次对发育整合在环境变化时期稳定形态进化中的重要性进行的长期验证。