Department of Molecular & Cellular Biology, Department of Organismic & Evolutionary Biology, Center for Brain Science, Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, 16 Divinity Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.
Department of Evolutionary Biology & Environmental Studies, University of Zürich, Winterthurerstrasse, 190 8057 Zürich, Switzerland.
Curr Biol. 2023 Apr 10;33(7):1237-1248.e4. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2023.02.045. Epub 2023 Mar 8.
Vocalization is a widespread social behavior in vertebrates that can affect fitness in the wild. Although many vocal behaviors are highly conserved, heritable features of specific vocalization types can vary both within and between species, raising the questions of why and how some vocal behaviors evolve. Here, using new computational tools to automatically detect and cluster vocalizations into distinct acoustic categories, we compare pup isolation calls across neonatal development in eight taxa of deer mice (genus Peromyscus) and compare them with laboratory mice (C57BL6/J strain) and free-living, wild house mice (Mus musculus domesticus). Whereas both Peromyscus and Mus pups produce ultrasonic vocalizations (USVs), Peromyscus pups also produce a second call type with acoustic features, temporal rhythms, and developmental trajectories that are distinct from those of USVs. In deer mice, these lower frequency "cries" are predominantly emitted in postnatal days one through nine, whereas USVs are primarily made after day 9. Using playback assays, we show that cries result in a more rapid approach by Peromyscus mothers than USVs, suggesting a role for cries in eliciting parental care early in neonatal development. Using a genetic cross between two sister species of deer mice exhibiting large, innate differences in the acoustic structure of cries and USVs, we find that variation in vocalization rate, duration, and pitch displays different degrees of genetic dominance and that cry and USV features can be uncoupled in second-generation hybrids. Taken together, this work shows that vocal behavior can evolve quickly between closely related rodent species in which vocalization types, likely serving distinct functions in communication, are controlled by distinct genetic loci.
发声是脊椎动物中广泛存在的一种社会行为,它会影响野生动物的适应性。尽管许多发声行为具有高度的保守性,但特定发声类型的可遗传特征在物种内和物种间都可能有所不同,这就提出了为什么有些发声行为会进化以及如何进化的问题。在这里,我们使用新的计算工具自动检测和聚类声音,将八种鹿鼠(属)的新生期隔离叫声与实验室小鼠(C57BL6/J 品系)和自由生活的野生小家鼠(Mus musculus domesticus)进行比较。尽管 Peromyscus 和 Mus 幼鼠都能发出超声波叫声(USVs),但 Peromyscus 幼鼠还能发出另一种具有不同声学特征、时间节奏和发育轨迹的叫声。在鹿鼠中,这些低频的“叫声”主要在出生后第 1 天到第 9 天发出,而 USVs 主要在第 9 天后发出。通过播放测试,我们发现叫声会促使 Peromyscus 母亲更快地接近,这表明在新生儿早期发展中,叫声可能在引起父母照顾方面发挥作用。利用两个表现出叫声和 USVs 结构存在巨大先天差异的鹿鼠姐妹种进行遗传杂交,我们发现,叫声率、持续时间和音高的变异显示出不同程度的遗传优势,并且叫声和 USVs 的特征可以在第二代杂交种中分离。总之,这项工作表明,发声行为可以在亲缘关系密切的啮齿动物物种之间迅速进化,而发声类型可能在通讯中发挥不同的功能,受不同的遗传基因座控制。