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谁听妈妈的话?从全家族视角看母性激素分配的演变。

Who listens to mother? A whole-family perspective on the evolution of maternal hormone allocation.

机构信息

Behavioural Biology, Groningen Institute for Evolutionary Life Sciences, University of Groningen, Nijenborgh 7, Groningen, 9747AG, The Netherlands.

Animal Sciences, Wageningen University and Research, de Elst 1, Wageningen, 6708WD, The Netherlands.

出版信息

Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2021 Oct;96(5):1951-1968. doi: 10.1111/brv.12733. Epub 2021 May 14.

Abstract

Maternal effects, or the influence of maternal environment and phenotype on offspring phenotype, may allow mothers to fine-tune their offspring's developmental trajectory and resulting phenotype sometimes long after the offspring has reached independence. However, maternal effects on offspring phenotype do not evolve in isolation, but rather within the context of a family unit, where the separate and often conflicting evolutionary interests of mothers, fathers and offspring are all at play. While intrafamilial conflicts are routinely invoked to explain other components of reproductive strategy, remarkably little is known about how intrafamilial conflicts influence maternal effects. We argue that much of the considerable variation in the relationship between maternally derived hormones, nutrients and other compounds and the resulting offspring phenotype might be explained by the presence of conflicting selection pressures on different family members. In this review, we examine the existing literature on maternal hormone allocation as a case study for maternal effects more broadly, and explore new hypotheses that arise when we consider current findings within a framework that explicitly incorporates the different evolutionary interests of the mother, her offspring and other family members. Specifically, we hypothesise that the relationship between maternal hormone allocation and offspring phenotype depends on a mother's ability to manipulate the signals she sends to offspring, the ability of family members to be plastic in their response to those signals and the capacity for the phenotypes and strategies of various family members to interact and influence one another on both behavioural and evolutionary timescales. We also provide suggestions for experimental, comparative and theoretical work that may be instrumental in testing these hypotheses. In particular, we highlight that manipulating the level of information available to different family members may reveal important insights into when and to what extent maternal hormones influence offspring development. We conclude that the evolution of maternal hormone allocation is likely to be shaped by the conflicting fitness optima of mothers, fathers and offspring, and that the outcome of this conflict depends on the relative balance of power between family members. Extending our hypotheses to incorporate interactions between family members, as well as more complex social groups and a wider range of taxa, may provide exciting new developments in the fields of endocrinology and maternal effects.

摘要

母体效应,即母体环境和表型对后代表型的影响,可能使母亲能够微调后代的发育轨迹和最终表型,有时甚至在后代独立很久之后。然而,母体效应对后代表型的影响并非孤立地发生,而是在家庭单位的背景下发生的,在这个单位中,母亲、父亲和后代各自独立且经常相互冲突的进化利益都在起作用。虽然家庭内冲突通常被用来解释生殖策略的其他组成部分,但对于家庭内冲突如何影响母体效应却知之甚少。我们认为,在很大程度上,可以用不同家庭成员身上存在的相互冲突的选择压力来解释从母体获得的激素、营养物质和其他化合物与后代表型之间的关系中的大量差异。在这篇综述中,我们以母体激素分配为例,考察了母体效应的现有文献,并探讨了在明确纳入母亲、她的后代和其他家庭成员的不同进化利益的框架内考虑现有发现时产生的新假说。具体来说,我们假设母体激素分配与后代表型之间的关系取决于母亲操纵她向后代发出信号的能力、家庭成员对这些信号做出反应的可塑性能力以及各种家庭成员的表型和策略在行为和进化时间尺度上相互作用和影响的能力。我们还为实验、比较和理论工作提供了建议,这些工作可能对检验这些假设很有帮助。特别是,我们强调,操纵不同家庭成员可用信息的水平可能会揭示关于母体激素在多大程度和何时影响后代发育的重要见解。我们得出结论,母体激素分配的进化很可能受到母亲、父亲和后代相互冲突的适应度最优值的影响,而这种冲突的结果取决于家庭成员之间相对的权力平衡。将我们的假设扩展到纳入家庭成员之间的相互作用,以及更复杂的社会群体和更广泛的分类群,可能会为内分泌学和母体效应领域提供令人兴奋的新发展。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/a113/8518390/18cbb0f832f0/BRV-96-1951-g001.jpg

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