Malerba Martino E, Marshall Dustin J
Centre of Geometric Biology, School of Biological Sciences Monash University Melbourne Australia.
Centre for Integrative Ecology, School of Life and Environmental Sciences Deakin University Victoria Australia.
Evol Lett. 2021 Jun 29;5(4):306-314. doi: 10.1002/evl3.243. eCollection 2021 Aug.
Larger cells have larger nuclei, but the precise relationship between cell size and nucleus size remains unclear, and the evolutionary forces that shape this relationship are debated. We compiled data for almost 900 species - from yeast to mammals - at three scales of biological organisation: among-species, within-species, and among-lineages of a species that was artificially selected for cell size. At all scales, we showed that the ratio of nucleus size to cell size (the 'N: C' ratio) decreased systematically in larger cells. Size evolution appears more constrained in nuclei than cells: cell size spans across six orders of magnitude, whereas nucleus size varies by only three. The next important challenge is to determine the drivers of this apparently ubiquitous relationship in N:C ratios across such a diverse array of organisms.
较大的细胞具有较大的细胞核,但细胞大小与细胞核大小之间的确切关系仍不清楚,而塑造这种关系的进化力量也存在争议。我们收集了近900个物种的数据——从酵母到哺乳动物——涵盖了生物组织的三个尺度:物种间、物种内以及一个因细胞大小而被人工选择的物种的谱系间。在所有尺度上,我们都表明,在较大的细胞中,细胞核大小与细胞大小的比率(“N:C”比率)会系统性下降。细胞核的大小进化似乎比细胞受到更多限制:细胞大小跨越六个数量级,而细胞核大小仅变化三个数量级。下一个重要挑战是确定在如此多样的生物体中,这种N:C比率中明显普遍存在的关系的驱动因素。