The evolutionary origin of somatic cells under the dirty work hypothesis.

Reproductive division of labor is a hallmark of multicellular organisms. However, the evolutionary pressures that give rise to delineated germ and somatic cells remain unclear. Here we propose a hypothesis that the mutagenic consequences associated with performing metabolic work favor such different...

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Main Authors: Heather J Goldsby, David B Knoester, Charles Ofria, Benjamin Kerr
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-05-01
Series:PLoS Biology
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4019463?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-2b16caf5a32e45e29642d459eef977e82021-07-02T04:47:21ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Biology1544-91731545-78852014-05-01125e100185810.1371/journal.pbio.1001858The evolutionary origin of somatic cells under the dirty work hypothesis.Heather J GoldsbyDavid B KnoesterCharles OfriaBenjamin KerrReproductive division of labor is a hallmark of multicellular organisms. However, the evolutionary pressures that give rise to delineated germ and somatic cells remain unclear. Here we propose a hypothesis that the mutagenic consequences associated with performing metabolic work favor such differentiation. We present evidence in support of this hypothesis gathered using a computational form of experimental evolution. Our digital organisms begin each experiment as undifferentiated multicellular individuals, and can evolve computational functions that improve their rate of reproduction. When such functions are associated with moderate mutagenic effects, we observe the evolution of reproductive division of labor within our multicellular organisms. Specifically, a fraction of the cells remove themselves from consideration as propagules for multicellular offspring, while simultaneously performing a disproportionately large amount of mutagenic work, and are thus classified as soma. As a consequence, other cells are able to take on the role of germ, remaining quiescent and thus protecting their genetic information. We analyze the lineages of multicellular organisms that successfully differentiate and discover that they display unforeseen evolutionary trajectories: cells first exhibit developmental patterns that concentrate metabolic work into a subset of germ cells (which we call "pseudo-somatic cells") and later evolve to eliminate the reproductive potential of these cells and thus convert them to actual soma. We also demonstrate that the evolution of somatic cells enables phenotypic strategies that are otherwise not easily accessible to undifferentiated organisms, though expression of these new phenotypic traits typically includes negative side effects such as aging.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4019463?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Heather J Goldsby
David B Knoester
Charles Ofria
Benjamin Kerr
spellingShingle Heather J Goldsby
David B Knoester
Charles Ofria
Benjamin Kerr
The evolutionary origin of somatic cells under the dirty work hypothesis.
PLoS Biology
author_facet Heather J Goldsby
David B Knoester
Charles Ofria
Benjamin Kerr
author_sort Heather J Goldsby
title The evolutionary origin of somatic cells under the dirty work hypothesis.
title_short The evolutionary origin of somatic cells under the dirty work hypothesis.
title_full The evolutionary origin of somatic cells under the dirty work hypothesis.
title_fullStr The evolutionary origin of somatic cells under the dirty work hypothesis.
title_full_unstemmed The evolutionary origin of somatic cells under the dirty work hypothesis.
title_sort evolutionary origin of somatic cells under the dirty work hypothesis.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Biology
issn 1544-9173
1545-7885
publishDate 2014-05-01
description Reproductive division of labor is a hallmark of multicellular organisms. However, the evolutionary pressures that give rise to delineated germ and somatic cells remain unclear. Here we propose a hypothesis that the mutagenic consequences associated with performing metabolic work favor such differentiation. We present evidence in support of this hypothesis gathered using a computational form of experimental evolution. Our digital organisms begin each experiment as undifferentiated multicellular individuals, and can evolve computational functions that improve their rate of reproduction. When such functions are associated with moderate mutagenic effects, we observe the evolution of reproductive division of labor within our multicellular organisms. Specifically, a fraction of the cells remove themselves from consideration as propagules for multicellular offspring, while simultaneously performing a disproportionately large amount of mutagenic work, and are thus classified as soma. As a consequence, other cells are able to take on the role of germ, remaining quiescent and thus protecting their genetic information. We analyze the lineages of multicellular organisms that successfully differentiate and discover that they display unforeseen evolutionary trajectories: cells first exhibit developmental patterns that concentrate metabolic work into a subset of germ cells (which we call "pseudo-somatic cells") and later evolve to eliminate the reproductive potential of these cells and thus convert them to actual soma. We also demonstrate that the evolution of somatic cells enables phenotypic strategies that are otherwise not easily accessible to undifferentiated organisms, though expression of these new phenotypic traits typically includes negative side effects such as aging.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4019463?pdf=render
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