Suppr超能文献

大脑越大、越昂贵,寿命越短:鱼类分类群中大脑大小与寿命的关系。

Large and expensive brain comes with a short lifespan: The relationship between brain size and longevity among fish taxa.

机构信息

School of Zoology, Faculty of Life Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel.

出版信息

J Fish Biol. 2022 Jul;101(1):92-99. doi: 10.1111/jfb.15074. Epub 2022 May 11.

Abstract

Vertebrates show substantial interspecific variation in brain size in relation to body mass. It has long been recognized that the evolution of large brains is associated with both costs and benefits, and it is their net benefit which should be favoured by natural selection. On one hand, the substantial energetic cost imposed by the maintenance of neural tissue is expected to compromise the energetic budget of organisms with large brains and their investment in other critical organs (expensive brain framework, EBF) or important physiological process, such as somatic maintenance and repair, thus accelerating ageing that shortens lifespan, as predicted by the disposable soma theory (DST). However, selection towards larger brain size can provide cognitive benefits (e.g., high behavioural flexibility) that may mitigate extrinsic mortality pressures, and thus may indirectly select for slower ageing that prolongs lifespan, as predicted by the cognitive buffer hypothesis (CBH). The relationship between longevity and brain size has been investigated to date only among terrestrial vertebrates, although the same selective forces acting on those species may also affect vertebrates living in aquatic habitats, such as fish. Thus, whether this evolutionary trade-off for brain size and longevity exists on a large scale among fish clades remains to be addressed. In this study, using a global dataset of 407 fish species, I undertook the first phylogenetic test of the brain size/longevity relationship in aquatic vertebrate species. The study revealed a negative relationship between brain size and longevity among cartilaginous fish confirming EBF and DST. However, no pattern emerged among bony fish species. Among sharks and rays, the high metabolic cost of producing neural tissue transcends the cognitive benefits of evolving a larger brain. Consequently, my findings suggest that the cost of maintaining brain tissue is relatively higher in ectothermic species than in endothermic ones.

摘要

脊椎动物的大脑大小与其体重比存在显著的种间差异。长期以来,人们一直认为大型大脑的进化与成本和收益都有关,而自然选择应该青睐的是其净收益。一方面,维持神经组织所带来的巨大能量成本预计会影响大脑较大的生物体的能量预算,使其在其他关键器官(昂贵的大脑框架,EBF)或重要生理过程上的投资受到损害,如躯体维护和修复,从而加速衰老,缩短寿命,这正如可丢弃躯体理论(DST)所预测的那样。然而,大脑尺寸增大的选择可以提供认知上的好处(例如,高行为灵活性),从而减轻外在的死亡率压力,因此可能间接地选择衰老速度较慢,延长寿命,这正如认知缓冲假说(CBH)所预测的那样。迄今为止,人们仅在陆生脊椎动物中研究了寿命与大脑大小之间的关系,尽管作用于这些物种的相同选择压力也可能影响生活在水生环境中的脊椎动物,例如鱼类。因此,在鱼类进化枝中,大脑大小和寿命之间的这种进化权衡是否在很大程度上存在,还有待解决。在这项研究中,我使用了一个包含 407 种鱼类的全球数据集,首次对水生脊椎动物物种的大脑大小/寿命关系进行了系统发育检验。该研究揭示了软骨鱼类的大脑大小与寿命之间存在负相关关系,证实了 EBF 和 DST。然而,硬骨鱼类并没有出现这种模式。在鲨鱼和鳐鱼中,产生神经组织的高代谢成本超过了进化出更大大脑的认知收益。因此,我的研究结果表明,维持脑组织的成本在变温动物中比在恒温动物中相对更高。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/c437/9544989/1ff77e50eaed/JFB-101-92-g001.jpg

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验