Bergey Christina M, Phillips-Conroy Jane E, Disotell Todd R, Jolly Clifford J
Department of Anthropology, New York University, New York, NY 10003; New York Consortium in Evolutionary Primatology, New York, NY 10016; Department of Biological Sciences, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, IN 46556;
Department of Neuroscience, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO 63110; Department of Anthropology, Washington University, St. Louis, MO 63130.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016 May 31;113(22):6178-81. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1525530113. Epub 2016 May 2.
In the endeavor to associate genetic variation with complex traits, closely related taxa are particularly fruitful for understanding the neurophysiological and genetic underpinnings of species-specific attributes. Similarity to humans has motivated research into nonhuman primate models, yet few studies of wild primates have investigated immediate causal factors of evolutionarily diverged social behaviors. Neurotransmitter differences have been invoked to explain the distinct behavioral suites of two baboon species in Awash, Ethiopia, which differ markedly in social behavior despite evolutionary propinquity. With this natural experiment, we test the hypothesis that genomic regions associated with monoamine neurotransmitters would be highly differentiated, and we identify a dopamine pathway as an outlier, highlighting the system as a potential cause of species-specific social behaviors. Dopamine levels and resultant variation in impulsivity were likely under differential selection in the species due to social system structure differences, with either brash or circumspect social behavior advantageous to secure mating opportunities depending on the social backdrop. Such comparative studies into the causes of the behavioral agendas that create and interact with social systems are of particular interest, and differences in temperament related to boldness and associated with dopamine variation likely played important roles in the evolution of all social, behaviorally complex animals, including baboons and humans.
在将基因变异与复杂性状联系起来的努力中,亲缘关系密切的分类群对于理解物种特异性特征的神经生理学和遗传学基础特别有成效。与人类的相似性推动了对非人类灵长类动物模型的研究,但很少有对野生灵长类动物的研究调查进化上分化的社会行为的直接因果因素。有人提出神经递质差异来解释埃塞俄比亚阿瓦什的两种狒狒物种截然不同的行为模式,尽管它们在进化上关系密切,但社会行为却有显著差异。通过这个自然实验,我们检验了与单胺神经递质相关的基因组区域会高度分化的假设,并确定一条多巴胺途径为异常值,突出了该系统作为物种特异性社会行为潜在原因的地位。由于社会系统结构的差异,多巴胺水平以及由此产生的冲动性变化在物种中可能受到不同的选择,根据社会背景,大胆或谨慎的社会行为有利于获得交配机会。对那些创造社会系统并与社会系统相互作用的行为议程的原因进行这样的比较研究特别有意义,与大胆相关且与多巴胺变化有关的气质差异可能在所有社会行为复杂的动物(包括狒狒和人类)的进化中发挥了重要作用。