Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA
Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.
Development. 2020 Apr 27;147(8):dev178004. doi: 10.1242/dev.178004.
How much evolutionary change in development do we expect? In this Spotlight, we argue that, as developmental biologists, we are in a prime position to contribute to the definition of a null hypothesis for developmental evolution: in other words, a hypothesis for how much developmental evolution we expect to observe over time. Today, we have access to an unprecedented array of developmental data from across the tree of life. Using these data, we can now consider development in the light of evolution, and vice versa, more deeply than ever before. As we do this, we may need to re-examine previous assumptions that appeared to serve us well when data points were fewer. Specifically, we think it is important to challenge assumptions that change is very rare for all developmental traits, especially if this assumption is used to sustain an erroneous view that evolution always optimizes adaptive traits toward increasing complexity.
我们预计在发育方面会有多少进化改变?在本期特写中,我们认为,作为发育生物学家,我们正处于一个有利位置,可以为发育进化的零假设定义做出贡献:换句话说,就是一个关于我们预计随着时间的推移会观察到多少发育进化的假设。如今,我们可以从生命之树的各个分支获取到空前多样的发育数据。利用这些数据,我们现在可以从进化的角度来考虑发育,反之亦然,比以往任何时候都更加深入。在这样做的过程中,我们可能需要重新审视之前的假设,这些假设在数据点较少时似乎对我们很有用。具体来说,我们认为,挑战所有发育特征的变化都非常罕见的假设很重要,特别是如果这一假设被用来维持一种错误的观点,即进化总是使适应性特征朝着增加复杂性的方向优化。