Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Organismal Biology, Brown University, Providence, RI, United States of America.
Department of Biological Sciences, Smith College, Northampton, MA, United States of America.
Horm Behav. 2022 Nov;146:105248. doi: 10.1016/j.yhbeh.2022.105248. Epub 2022 Aug 30.
Sex steroids play an important role in regulation of the vertebrate reproductive phenotype. This is because sex steroids not only activate sexual behaviors that mediate copulation, courtship, and aggression, but they also help guide the development of neural and muscular systems that underlie these traits. Many biologists have therefore described the effects of sex steroid action on reproductive behavior as both "activational" and "organizational," respectively. Here, we focus on these phenomena from an evolutionary standpoint, highlighting that we know relatively little about the way that organizational effects evolve in the natural world to support the adaptation and diversification of reproductive behavior. We first review the evidence that such effects do in fact evolve to mediate the evolution of sexual behavior. We then introduce an emerging animal model - the foot-flagging frog, Staurois parvus - that will be useful to study how sex hormones shape neuromotor development necessary for sexual displays. The foot flag is nothing more than a waving display that males use to compete for access to female mates, and thus the neural circuits that control its production are likely laid down when limb control systems arise during the developmental transition from tadpole to frog. We provide data that highlights how sex steroids might organize foot-flagging behavior through its putative underlying mechanisms. Overall, we anticipate that future studies of foot-flagging frogs will open a powerful window from which to see how sex steroids influence the neuromotor systems to help germinate circuits that drive signaling behavior. In this way, our aim is to bring attention to the important frontier of endocrinological regulation of evolutionary developmental biology (endo-evo-devo) and its relationship to behavior.
性激素在调节脊椎动物的生殖表型方面发挥着重要作用。这是因为性激素不仅激活了介导交配、求爱和攻击的性行为,还帮助指导了这些特征所依赖的神经和肌肉系统的发育。因此,许多生物学家将性激素对生殖行为的作用描述为“激活”和“组织”。在这里,我们从进化的角度关注这些现象,强调我们相对较少了解组织效应在自然界中进化的方式,以支持生殖行为的适应和多样化。我们首先回顾了证据,表明这些效应确实在进化中发挥作用,以介导性行为的进化。然后,我们引入了一个新兴的动物模型——短足树蛙(Staurois parvus),这将有助于研究性荷尔蒙如何塑造性展示所需的神经运动发育。足部摆动不过是雄性用来争夺雌性伴侣的一种挥动展示,因此控制其产生的神经回路可能是在从蝌蚪到青蛙的发育过渡期间,肢体控制系统出现时形成的。我们提供的数据强调了性激素如何通过其潜在机制来组织足部摆动行为。总的来说,我们预计对短足树蛙的未来研究将开辟一个有力的窗口,使我们能够了解性激素如何影响神经运动系统,以帮助产生驱动信号行为的回路。通过这种方式,我们的目标是引起人们对内分泌调节进化发育生物学(endo-evo-devo)及其与行为关系的重要前沿领域的关注。