Literature DB >> 23090991

Metabolic constraint imposes tradeoff between body size and number of brain neurons in human evolution.

Karina Fonseca-Azevedo1, Suzana Herculano-Houzel.   

Abstract

Despite a general trend for larger mammals to have larger brains, humans are the primates with the largest brain and number of neurons, but not the largest body mass. Why are great apes, the largest primates, not also those endowed with the largest brains? Recently, we showed that the energetic cost of the brain is a linear function of its numbers of neurons. Here we show that metabolic limitations that result from the number of hours available for feeding and the low caloric yield of raw foods impose a tradeoff between body size and number of brain neurons, which explains the small brain size of great apes compared with their large body size. This limitation was probably overcome in Homo erectus with the shift to a cooked diet. Absent the requirement to spend most available hours of the day feeding, the combination of newly freed time and a large number of brain neurons affordable on a cooked diet may thus have been a major positive driving force to the rapid increased in brain size in human evolution.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23090991      PMCID: PMC3494886          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1206390109

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  35 in total

1.  Energetic consequences of thermal and nonthermal food processing.

Authors:  Rachel N Carmody; Gil S Weintraub; Richard W Wrangham
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2011-11-07       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Ecological consequences of scaling of chew cycle duration and daily feeding time in primates.

Authors:  Callum F Ross; Rhyan L Washington; Alison Eckhardt; David A Reed; Erin R Vogel; Nathaniel J Dominy; Zarin P Machanda
Journal:  J Hum Evol       Date:  2009-05-17       Impact factor: 3.895

3.  Great apes prefer cooked food.

Authors:  Victoria Wobber; Brian Hare; Richard Wrangham
Journal:  J Hum Evol       Date:  2008-05-16       Impact factor: 3.895

4.  The energetic significance of cooking.

Authors:  Rachel N Carmody; Richard W Wrangham
Journal:  J Hum Evol       Date:  2009-09-03       Impact factor: 3.895

5.  Relative brain size and metabolism in mammals.

Authors:  E Armstrong
Journal:  Science       Date:  1983-06-17       Impact factor: 47.728

6.  Gorilla and orangutan brains conform to the primate cellular scaling rules: implications for human evolution.

Authors:  Suzana Herculano-Houzel; Jon H Kaas
Journal:  Brain Behav Evol       Date:  2011-01-11       Impact factor: 1.808

7.  Equal numbers of neuronal and nonneuronal cells make the human brain an isometrically scaled-up primate brain.

Authors:  Frederico A C Azevedo; Ludmila R B Carvalho; Lea T Grinberg; José Marcelo Farfel; Renata E L Ferretti; Renata E P Leite; Wilson Jacob Filho; Roberto Lent; Suzana Herculano-Houzel
Journal:  J Comp Neurol       Date:  2009-04-10       Impact factor: 3.215

8.  Intra-and interpopulational differences in orangutan (Pongo pygmaeus) activity and diet: implications for the invention of tool use.

Authors:  ElizaBeth A Fox; Carel P van Schaik; Arnold Sitompul; Donielle N Wright
Journal:  Am J Phys Anthropol       Date:  2004-10       Impact factor: 2.868

9.  Physiology: hibernation in a tropical primate.

Authors:  Kathrin H Dausmann; Julian Glos; Jörg U Ganzhorn; Gerhard Heldmaier
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2004-06-24       Impact factor: 49.962

10.  The human brain in numbers: a linearly scaled-up primate brain.

Authors:  Suzana Herculano-Houzel
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2009-11-09       Impact factor: 3.169

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  44 in total

1.  Single-cell imaging tools for brain energy metabolism: a review.

Authors:  Alejandro San Martín; Tamara Sotelo-Hitschfeld; Rodrigo Lerchundi; Ignacio Fernández-Moncada; Sebastian Ceballo; Rocío Valdebenito; Felipe Baeza-Lehnert; Karin Alegría; Yasna Contreras-Baeza; Pamela Garrido-Gerter; Ignacio Romero-Gómez; L Felipe Barros
Journal:  Neurophotonics       Date:  2014-05-29       Impact factor: 3.593

2.  The costs of a big brain: extreme encephalization results in higher energetic demand and reduced hypoxia tolerance in weakly electric African fishes.

Authors:  Kimberley V Sukhum; Megan K Freiler; Robert Wang; Bruce A Carlson
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2016-12-28       Impact factor: 5.349

3.  Assessing the mean strength and variations of the time-to-time fluctuations of resting-state brain activity.

Authors:  Zhengjun Li; Yu-Feng Zang; Jianping Ding; Ze Wang
Journal:  Med Biol Eng Comput       Date:  2016-07-11       Impact factor: 2.602

4.  Metabolic costs and evolutionary implications of human brain development.

Authors:  Christopher W Kuzawa; Harry T Chugani; Lawrence I Grossman; Leonard Lipovich; Otto Muzik; Patrick R Hof; Derek E Wildman; Chet C Sherwood; William R Leonard; Nicholas Lange
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2014-08-25       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  Psychiatry and social nutritional neuroscience.

Authors:  Janice K Kiecolt-Glaser; Lisa M Jaremka; Spenser Hughes
Journal:  World Psychiatry       Date:  2014-06       Impact factor: 49.548

6.  Divergent Ah Receptor Ligand Selectivity during Hominin Evolution.

Authors:  Troy D Hubbard; Iain A Murray; William H Bisson; Alexis P Sullivan; Aswathy Sebastian; George H Perry; Nina G Jablonski; Gary H Perdew
Journal:  Mol Biol Evol       Date:  2016-08-02       Impact factor: 16.240

7.  Sex differences in estimated brain metabolism in relation to body growth through adolescence.

Authors:  Simon N Vandekar; Haochang Shou; Theodore D Satterthwaite; Russell T Shinohara; Alison K Merikangas; David R Roalf; Kosha Ruparel; Adon Rosen; Efstathios D Gennatas; Mark A Elliott; Christos Davatzikos; Ruben C Gur; Raquel E Gur; John A Detre
Journal:  J Cereb Blood Flow Metab       Date:  2017-10-26       Impact factor: 6.200

8.  Primate hippocampus size and organization are predicted by sociality but not diet.

Authors:  Orlin S Todorov; Vera Weisbecker; Emmanuel Gilissen; Karl Zilles; Alexandra A de Sousa
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2019-10-30       Impact factor: 5.349

Review 9.  What is normal in normal aging? Effects of aging, amyloid and Alzheimer's disease on the cerebral cortex and the hippocampus.

Authors:  Anders M Fjell; Linda McEvoy; Dominic Holland; Anders M Dale; Kristine B Walhovd
Journal:  Prog Neurobiol       Date:  2014-02-16       Impact factor: 11.685

10.  The power of predictions: An emerging paradigm for psychological research.

Authors:  J Benjamin Hutchinson; Lisa Feldman Barrett
Journal:  Curr Dir Psychol Sci       Date:  2019-04-16
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