Department of Biology, Wake Forest University, 455 Vine Street, Winston-Salem, NC 27101, United States.
Department of Biology, Wake Forest University, 455 Vine Street, Winston-Salem, NC 27101, United States.
J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol. 2018 Nov;184:47-56. doi: 10.1016/j.jsbmb.2018.06.004. Epub 2018 Jun 5.
Sex steroids mediate the organization and activation of masculine reproductive phenotypes in diverse vertebrate taxa. However, the effects of sex steroid action in this context vary tremendously, in that steroid action influences reproductive physiology and behavior in markedly different ways (even among closely related species). This leads to the idea that the mechanisms underlying sex steroid action similarly differ across vertebrates in a manner that supports diversification of important sexual traits. Here, we highlight the Evolutionary Potential Hypothesis as a framework for understanding how androgen-dependent reproductive behavior evolves. This idea posits that the cellular mechanisms underlying androgenic action can independently evolve within a given target tissue to adjust the hormone's functional effects. The result is a seemingly endless number of permutations in androgenic signaling pathways that can be mapped onto the incredible diversity of reproductive phenotypes. One reason this hypothesis is important is because it shifts current thinking about the evolution of steroid-dependent traits away from an emphasis on circulating steroid levels and toward a focus on molecular mechanisms of hormone action. To this end, we also provide new empirical data suggesting that certain cellular modulators of androgen action-namely, the co-factors that dynamically adjust transcritpional effects of steroid action either up or down-are also substrates on which evolution can act. We then close the review with a detailed look at a case study in the golden-collared manakin (Manacus vitellinus). Work in this tropical bird shows how androgenic signaling systems are modified in specific parts of the skeletal muscle system to enhance motor performance necessary to produce acrobatic courtship displays. Altogether, this paper seeks to develop a platform to better understand how steroid action influences the evolution of complex animal behavior.
性激素在不同的脊椎动物类群中调节雄性生殖表型的组织和激活。然而,在这种情况下,性激素的作用效果差异极大,因为类固醇的作用会以明显不同的方式影响生殖生理和行为(即使在密切相关的物种中也是如此)。这就产生了这样一种观点,即在不同的脊椎动物中,性激素作用的机制也会以支持重要性特征多样化的方式而大不相同。在这里,我们强调进化潜力假说作为理解雄激素依赖性生殖行为如何进化的框架。这个想法假设,雄激素作用的细胞机制可以在给定的靶组织内独立进化,以调整激素的功能效应。其结果是,雄激素信号通路中的似乎无穷无尽的排列可以映射到生殖表型的惊人多样性上。这个假说之所以重要,有一个原因是它将类固醇依赖性特征的进化从对循环类固醇水平的强调转移到对激素作用的分子机制的关注上。为此,我们还提供了新的实证数据,表明雄激素作用的某些细胞调节剂——即动态调节类固醇作用转录效应的协同因子,无论是上调还是下调——也是进化可以作用的底物。然后,我们在一个金颈丛鸦(Manacus vitellinus)的案例研究中结束了综述。在这种热带鸟类中的工作表明,雄激素信号系统如何在骨骼肌系统的特定部位进行修饰,以增强产生杂技求偶展示所需的运动表现。总的来说,本文旨在为更好地理解类固醇作用如何影响复杂动物行为的进化提供一个平台。