Selection for Mitochondrial Quality Drives Evolution of the Germline

被引:51
|
作者
Radzvilavicius, Arunas L. [1 ,2 ]
Hadjivasiliou, Zena [1 ,2 ]
Pomiankowski, Andrew [1 ,2 ]
Lane, Nick [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] UCL, Ctr Math & Phys Life Sci & Expt Biol, London, England
[2] UCL, Res Dept Genet Evolut & Environm, London, England
基金
英国工程与自然科学研究理事会;
关键词
OXIDATIVE DNA-DAMAGE; FREE-RADICALS; PLANT MITOCHONDRIAL; PURIFYING SELECTION; SEQUENCE EVOLUTION; CAMBRIAN RADIATION; MUTATION-RATE; MATING TYPES; HUMAN SKIN; MTDNA;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pbio.2000410
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
The origin of the germline-soma distinction is a fundamental unsolved question. Plants and basal metazoans do not have a germline but generate gametes from pluripotent stem cells in somatic tissues (somatic gametogenesis). In contrast, most bilaterians sequester a dedicated germline early in development. We develop an evolutionary model which shows that selection for mitochondrial quality drives germline evolution. In organisms with low mitochondrial replication error rates, segregation of mutations over multiple cell divisions generates variation, allowing selection to optimize gamete quality through somatic gametogenesis. Higher mutation rates promote early germline sequestration. We also consider how oogamy (a large female gamete packed with mitochondria) alters selection on the germline. Oogamy is beneficial as it reduces mitochondrial segregation in early development, improving adult fitness by restricting variation between tissues. But it also limits variation between early-sequestered oocytes, undermining gamete quality. Oocyte variation is restored through proliferation of germline cells, producing more germ cells than strictly needed, explaining the random culling (atresia) of precursor cells in bilaterians. Unlike other models of germline evolution, selection for mitochondrial quality can explain the stability of somatic gametogenesis in plants and basal metazoans, the evolution of oogamy in all plants and animals with tissue differentiation, and the mutational forces driving early germline sequestration in active bilaterians. The origins of predation in motile bilaterians in the Cambrian explosion is likely to have increased rates of tissue turnover and mitochondrial replication errors, in turn driving germline evolution and the emergence of complex developmental processes.
引用
收藏
页数:26
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Mitochondrial fragmentation drives selective removal of deleterious mtDNA in the germline
    Lieber, Toby
    Jeedigunta, Swathi P.
    Palozzi, Jonathan M.
    Lehmann, Ruth
    Hurd, Thomas R.
    NATURE, 2019, 570 (7761) : 380 - +
  • [2] Mitochondrial maturation drives germline stem cell differentiation in Caenorhabditiselegans
    Charmpilas, Nikolaos
    Tavernarakis, Nektarios
    CELL DEATH AND DIFFERENTIATION, 2020, 27 (02): : 601 - 617
  • [3] Mitochondrial fragmentation drives selective removal of deleterious mtDNA in the germline
    Toby Lieber
    Swathi P. Jeedigunta
    Jonathan M. Palozzi
    Ruth Lehmann
    Thomas R. Hurd
    Nature, 2019, 570 : 380 - 384
  • [4] Mitochondrial maturation drives germline stem cell differentiation in Caenorhabditiselegans
    Nikolaos Charmpilas
    Nektarios Tavernarakis
    Cell Death & Differentiation, 2020, 27 : 601 - 617
  • [5] Haploid selection drives new gene male germline expression
    Raices, Julia B.
    Otto, Paulo A.
    Vibranovski, Maria D.
    GENOME RESEARCH, 2019, 29 (07) : 1115 - 1122
  • [6] Germline selection shapes human mitochondrial DNA diversity
    Wei, Wei
    Tuna, Salih
    Keogh, Michael J.
    Smith, Katherine R.
    Aitman, Timothy J.
    Beales, Phil L.
    Bennett, David L.
    Gale, Daniel P.
    Bitner-Glindzicz, Maria A. K.
    Black, Graeme C.
    Brennan, Paul
    Elliott, Perry
    Flinter, Frances A.
    Floto, R. Andres
    Houlden, Henry
    Irving, Melita
    Koziell, Ania
    Maher, Eamonn R.
    Markus, Hugh S.
    Morrell, Nicholas W.
    Newman, William G.
    Roberts, Irene
    Sayer, John A.
    Smith, Kenneth G. C.
    Taylor, Jenny C.
    Watkins, Hugh
    Webster, Andrew R.
    Wilkie, Andrew O. M.
    Williamson, Catherine
    Attwood, Anthony
    Brown, Matthew
    Brod, Naomi Clements
    Crisp-Hihn, Abigail
    Davis, John
    Deevi, Sri V. V.
    Dewhurst, Eleanor F.
    Edwards, Karen
    Erwood, Marie
    Fox, James
    Frary, Amy J.
    Hu, Fengyuan
    Jolley, Jennifer
    Kingston, Nathalie
    Linger, Rachel
    Mapeta, Rutendo
    Martin, Jennifer
    Meacham, Stuart
    Papadia, Sofia
    Rayner-Matthews, Paula J.
    Samarghitean, Crina
    SCIENCE, 2019, 364 (6442) : 749 - +
  • [7] Myopic selection of novel information drives evolution
    Danchin, Antoine
    CURRENT OPINION IN BIOTECHNOLOGY, 2009, 20 (04) : 504 - 508
  • [8] Positive selection drives lactoferrin evolution in mammals
    Guo Ming Liang
    Xun Ping Jiang
    Genetica, 2010, 138 : 757 - 762
  • [9] Positive selection drives lactoferrin evolution in mammals
    Liang, Guo Ming
    Jiang, Xun Ping
    GENETICA, 2010, 138 (07) : 757 - 762
  • [10] Natural selection drives the evolution of mitogenomes in Acrossocheilus
    Zhao, Dan
    Guo, Yudong
    Gao, Yang
    PLOS ONE, 2022, 17 (10):