Sheriff Michael J, Bell Alison, Boonstra Rudy, Dantzer Ben, Lavergne Sophia G, McGhee Katie E, MacLeod Kirsty J, Winandy Laurane, Zimmer Cedric, Love Oliver P
Department of Ecosystem Science and Management, Huck Institute of the Life Sciences, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802, USA.
School of Integrative Biology, Program in Neuroscience, and Program in Ecology, Evolution and Conservation Biology, Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology, University of Illinois, Urbana Champaign, IL 61821, USA.
Integr Comp Biol. 2017 Sep 1;57(3):437-449. doi: 10.1093/icb/icx105.
Maternal stress can prenatally influence offspring phenotypes and there are an increasing number of ecological studies that are bringing to bear biomedical findings to natural systems. This is resulting in a shift from the perspective that maternal stress is unanimously costly, to one in which maternal stress may be beneficial to offspring. However, this adaptive perspective is in its infancy with much progress to still be made in understanding the role of maternal stress in natural systems. Our aim is to emphasize the importance of the ecological and evolutionary context within which adaptive hypotheses of maternal stress can be evaluated. We present five primary research areas where we think future research can make substantial progress: (1) understanding maternal and offspring control mechanisms that modulate exposure between maternal stress and subsequent offspring phenotype response; (2) understanding the dynamic nature of the interaction between mothers and their environment; (3) integrating offspring phenotypic responses and measuring both maternal and offspring fitness outcomes under real-life (either free-living or semi-natural) conditions; (4) empirically testing these fitness outcomes across relevant spatial and temporal environmental contexts (both pre- and post-natal environments); (5) examining the role of maternal stress effects in human-altered environments-i.e., do they limit or enhance fitness. To make progress, it is critical to understand the role of maternal stress in an ecological context and to do that, we must integrate across physiology, behavior, genetics, and evolution.
母体应激可在产前影响后代的表型,并且越来越多的生态学研究正在将生物医学研究结果应用于自然系统。这正在导致一种观念转变,即从认为母体应激无一例外都是有代价的,转变为认为母体应激可能对后代有益。然而,这种适应性观点尚处于起步阶段,在理解母体应激在自然系统中的作用方面仍有很大进展空间。我们的目的是强调生态和进化背景的重要性,在这种背景下可以评估母体应激的适应性假说。我们提出了五个主要研究领域,我们认为未来的研究可以在这些领域取得实质性进展:(1)了解调节母体应激与后代后续表型反应之间暴露的母体和后代控制机制;(2)了解母亲与其环境之间相互作用的动态性质;(3)整合后代的表型反应,并在现实生活(自由生活或半自然)条件下测量母体和后代的适合度结果;(4)在相关的时空环境背景(产前和产后环境)下实证检验这些适合度结果;(5)研究母体应激效应在人类改变的环境中的作用——即它们是限制还是增强适合度。为了取得进展,理解母体应激在生态背景中的作用至关重要,而要做到这一点,我们必须整合生理学、行为学、遗传学和进化等方面的知识。