Friday, January 13, 2017

Domestication syndrome in mammals

Hej hej!

Tobias will be teaching in Czech Republic next Tuesday (Jan 17), so I'm jumping the queue ;-)
I would like to discuss the following paper:

I think the authors are putting forward a very original idea that is worth while following up! In a nutshell: they suggest that a concerted response of neural crest cells is underlying the suite of traits that domesticated mammals have in common: floppy ears, smaller teeth, increased docility and tameness, curly tail, smaller brains etc.


See you in Darwin's at 10 am on Tuesday!

Abstract:
Charles Darwin, while trying to devise a general theory of heredity from the observations of animal and plant breeders, discovered that domesticated mammals possess a distinctive and unusual suite of heritable traits not seen in their wild progenitors. Some of these traits also appear in domesticated birds and fish. The origin of Darwin’s “domestication syndrome” has remained a conundrum for more than 140 years. Most explanations focus on particular traits, while neglecting others, or on the possible selective factors involved in domestication rather than the underlying developmental and genetic causes of these traits. Here, we propose that the domestication syndrome results predominantly from mild neural crest cell deficits during embryonic development. Most of the modified traits, both morphological and physiological, can be readily explained as direct consequences of such deficiencies, while other traits are explicable as indirect consequences. We first show how the hypothesis can account for the multiple, apparently unrelated traits of the syndrome and then explore its genetic dimensions and predictions, reviewing the available genetic evidence. The article concludes with a brief discussion of some genetic and developmental questions raised by the idea, along with specific predictions and experimental tests.

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