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大脑较大的鸟类遭受的氧化损伤较少。

Large-brained birds suffer less oxidative damage.

作者信息

Vágási C I, Vincze O, Pătraş L, Osváth G, Marton A, Bărbos L, Sol D, Pap P L

机构信息

MTA-DE "Lendület" Behavioural Ecology Research Group, Department of Evolutionary Zoology, University of Debrecen, Debrecen, Hungary.

Evolutionary Ecology Group, Hungarian Department of Biology and Ecology, Babeş-Bolyai University, Cluj Napoca, Romania.

出版信息

J Evol Biol. 2016 Oct;29(10):1968-1976. doi: 10.1111/jeb.12920. Epub 2016 Jun 30.

Abstract

Large brains (relative to body size) might confer fitness benefits to animals. Although the putative costs of well-developed brains can constrain the majority of species to modest brain sizes, these costs are still poorly understood. Given that the neural tissue is energetically expensive and demands antioxidants, one potential cost of developing and maintaining large brains is increased oxidative stress ('oxidation exposure' hypothesis). Alternatively, because large-brained species exhibit slow-paced life histories, they are expected to invest more into self-maintenance such as an efficacious antioxidative defence machinery ('oxidation avoidance' hypothesis). We predict decreased antioxidant levels and/or increased oxidative damage in large-brained species in case of oxidation exposure, and the contrary in case of oxidation avoidance. We address these contrasting hypotheses for the first time by means of a phylogenetic comparative approach based on an unprecedented data set of four redox state markers from 85 European bird species. Large-brained birds suffered less oxidative damage to lipids (measured as malondialdehyde levels) and exhibited higher total nonenzymatic antioxidant capacity than small-brained birds, whereas uric acid and glutathione levels were independent of brain size. These results were not altered by potentially confounding variables and did not depend on how relative brain size was quantified. Our findings partially support the 'oxidation avoidance' hypothesis and provide a physiological explanation for the linkage of large brains with slow-paced life histories: reduced oxidative stress of large-brained birds can secure brain functionality and healthy life span, which are integral to their lifetime fitness and slow-paced life history.

摘要

大脑袋(相对于身体大小而言)可能会给动物带来适应性优势。尽管发育良好的大脑可能存在的代价会限制大多数物种的大脑尺寸维持在适度水平,但这些代价仍未得到充分理解。鉴于神经组织在能量方面成本高昂且需要抗氧化剂,发育和维持大脑袋的一个潜在代价是氧化应激增加(“氧化暴露”假说)。另外,由于大脑袋物种表现出缓慢的生活节奏,它们预计会在自我维持方面投入更多,比如拥有高效的抗氧化防御机制(“氧化避免”假说)。我们预测,在氧化暴露的情况下,大脑袋物种的抗氧化剂水平会降低和/或氧化损伤会增加,而在氧化避免的情况下则相反。我们首次通过系统发育比较方法,基于来自85种欧洲鸟类的四个氧化还原状态标记的前所未有的数据集,来探讨这些相互矛盾的假说。大脑袋鸟类的脂质氧化损伤(以丙二醛水平衡量)比小脑袋鸟类少,并且表现出更高的总非酶抗氧化能力,而尿酸和谷胱甘肽水平与大脑大小无关。这些结果不会因潜在的混杂变量而改变,也不取决于相对大脑大小的量化方式。我们的发现部分支持了“氧化避免”假说,并为大脑袋与缓慢生活节奏之间的联系提供了一种生理学解释:大脑袋鸟类氧化应激的降低可以确保大脑功能和健康寿命,这对它们的终身适应性和缓慢生活节奏至关重要。

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