Literature DB >> 33422150

Why call it developmental bias when it is just development?

Isaac Salazar-Ciudad1,2,3.   

Abstract

The concept of developmental constraints has been central to understand the role of development in morphological evolution. Developmental constraints are classically defined as biases imposed by development on the distribution of morphological variation.This opinion article argues that the concepts of developmental constraints and developmental biases do not accurately represent the role of development in evolution. The concept of developmental constraints was coined to oppose the view that natural selection is all-capable and to highlight the importance of development for understanding evolution. In the modern synthesis, natural selection was seen as the main factor determining the direction of morphological evolution. For that to be the case, morphological variation needs to be isotropic (i.e. equally possible in all directions). The proponents of the developmental constraint concept argued that development makes that some morphological variation is more likely than other (i.e. variation is not isotropic), and that, thus, development constraints evolution by precluding natural selection from being all-capable.This article adds to the idea that development is not compatible with the isotropic expectation by arguing that, in fact, it could not be otherwise: there is no actual reason to expect that development could lead to isotropic morphological variation. It is then argued that, since the isotropic expectation is untenable, the role of development in evolution should not be understood as a departure from such an expectation. The role of development in evolution should be described in an exclusively positive way, as the process determining which directions of morphological variation are possible, instead of negatively, as a process precluding the existence of morphological variation we have no actual reason to expect.This article discusses that this change of perspective is not a mere question of semantics: it leads to a different interpretation of the studies on developmental constraints and to a different research program in evolution and development. This program does not ask whether development constrains evolution. Instead it asks questions such as, for example, how different types of development lead to different types of morphological variation and, together with natural selection, determine the directions in which different lineages evolve.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Development; Developmental bias; Developmental constraints; Developmental mechanisms; Morphogenesis; Morphological evolution; Variational properties

Year:  2021        PMID: 33422150      PMCID: PMC7796527          DOI: 10.1186/s13062-020-00289-w

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biol Direct        ISSN: 1745-6150            Impact factor:   4.540


  53 in total

Review 1.  Limits to natural selection.

Authors:  N Barton; L Partridge
Journal:  Bioessays       Date:  2000-12       Impact factor: 4.345

2.  Developmental constraints in a comparative framework: a test case using variations in phalanx number during amniote evolution.

Authors:  Michael K Richardson; Ariel D Chipman
Journal:  J Exp Zool B Mol Dev Evol       Date:  2003-04-15       Impact factor: 2.656

3.  The effect of development on the direction of evolution: toward a twenty-first century consensus.

Authors:  Wallace Arthur
Journal:  Evol Dev       Date:  2004 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 1.930

4.  How different types of pattern formation mechanisms affect the evolution of form and development.

Authors:  Isaac Salazar-Ciudad; Jukka Jernvall
Journal:  Evol Dev       Date:  2004 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 1.930

Review 5.  Developmental Bias and Evolution: A Regulatory Network Perspective.

Authors:  Tobias Uller; Armin P Moczek; Richard A Watson; Paul M Brakefield; Kevin N Laland
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2018-08       Impact factor: 4.562

Review 6.  Looking Beyond the Genes: The Interplay Between Signaling Pathways and Mechanics in the Shaping and Diversification of Epithelial Tissues.

Authors:  S Urdy; N Goudemand; S Pantalacci
Journal:  Curr Top Dev Biol       Date:  2016-05-05       Impact factor: 4.897

7.  Positional information and the spatial pattern of cellular differentiation.

Authors:  L Wolpert
Journal:  J Theor Biol       Date:  1969-10       Impact factor: 2.691

8.  The dimensionality of genetic variation for wing shape in Drosophila melanogaster.

Authors:  Jason G Mezey; David Houle
Journal:  Evolution       Date:  2005-05       Impact factor: 3.694

9.  Not all roads can be taken: development induces anisotropic accessibility in morphospace.

Authors:  Sylvain Gerber
Journal:  Evol Dev       Date:  2014-09-11       Impact factor: 1.930

10.  In silico evo-devo: reconstructing stages in the evolution of animal segmentation.

Authors:  Renske M A Vroomans; Paulien Hogeweg; Kirsten H W J Ten Tusscher
Journal:  Evodevo       Date:  2016-08-01       Impact factor: 2.250

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  2 in total

1.  A Grand Challenge in Development and Evodevo: Quantifying the Role of Development in Evolution.

Authors:  Aaron R Leichty; Neelima Roy Sinha
Journal:  Front Plant Sci       Date:  2022-01-11       Impact factor: 5.753

2.  Morphological Evolution: Bioinspired Methods for Analyzing Bioinspired Robots.

Authors:  Eric Aaron; Joshua Hawthorne-Madell; Ken Livingston; John H Long
Journal:  Front Robot AI       Date:  2022-01-14
  2 in total

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