Division of Animal Sciences, University of Missouri, 440G/446 Life Sciences Center, Columbia, MO, USA.
Comparative Genome Biology, Department of Genetics and Evolution, School of Biological Sciences, The University of Adelaide, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
Adv Anat Embryol Cell Biol. 2021;234:7-19. doi: 10.1007/978-3-030-77360-1_2.
In the vertebrate tree of life, viviparity or live birth has independently evolved many times, resulting in a rich diversity of reproductive strategies. Viviparity is believed to be a mode of reproduction that evolved from the ancestral condition of oviparity or egg laying, where most of the fetal development occurs outside the body. Today, there is not a simple model of parity transition to explain this species-specific divergence in modes of reproduction. Most evidence points to a gradual series of evolutionary adaptations that account for this phenomenon of reproduction, elegantly displayed by various viviparous squamates that exhibit placentae formed by the appositions of maternal and embryonic tissues, which share significant homology with the tissues that form the placenta in therian mammals. In an era where the genomes of many vertebrate species are becoming available, studies are now exploring the molecular basis of this transition from oviparity to viviparity, and in some rare instances its possible reversibility, such as the Australian three-toed skink (Saiphos equalis). In contrast to the parity diversity in squamates, mammals are viviparous with the notable exception of the egg-laying monotremes. Advancing computational tools coupled with increasing genome availability across species that utilize different reproductive strategies promise to reveal the molecular underpinnings of the ancestral transition of oviparity to viviparity. As a result, the dramatic changes in reproductive physiology and anatomy that accompany these parity changes can be reinterpreted. This chapter will briefly explore the vertebrate modes of reproduction using a phylogenetic framework and where possible highlight the role of potential candidate genes that may help explain the polygenic origins of live birth.
在脊椎动物的生命之树上,胎生或活体分娩已经独立进化了多次,从而产生了丰富多样的生殖策略。胎生被认为是一种从卵生或产卵的祖先状态进化而来的生殖方式,在这种方式中,大部分胎儿发育发生在体外。如今,没有一个简单的均等性转变模型可以解释这种生殖模式的物种特异性差异。大多数证据指向一系列渐进的进化适应,这些适应解释了这种生殖现象,各种胎生有鳞目爬行动物巧妙地展示了这一点,它们的胎盘由母体和胚胎组织的并列形成,与形成真兽类哺乳动物胎盘的组织具有显著的同源性。在许多脊椎动物物种的基因组变得可用的时代,研究现在正在探索从卵生到胎生的这种转变的分子基础,并且在某些罕见的情况下,其可能的逆转,例如澳大利亚三趾石龙子(Saiphos equalis)。与有鳞目动物的均等性多样性形成对比的是,哺乳动物是胎生的,除了产卵的单孔目动物。随着越来越多的物种利用不同的生殖策略,计算工具的不断进步和基因组的不断增加,有望揭示从卵生到胎生的祖先转变的分子基础。因此,可以重新解释伴随这些均等性变化的生殖生理学和解剖学的巨大变化。本章将简要探讨使用系统发育框架的脊椎动物生殖方式,并在可能的情况下强调潜在候选基因的作用,这些基因可能有助于解释活体分娩的多基因起源。