Affiliation:
1. Institute of Biotechnology, HiLIFE University of Helsinki Helsinki Finland
2. Department of Geosciences and Geography University of Helsinki Helsinki Finland
Abstract
AbstractThe development of an individual must be capable of resisting the harmful effects of internal and external perturbations. This capacity, called robustness, can make the difference between normal variation and disease. Some systems and organs are more resilient in their capacity to correct the effects of internal disturbances such as mutations. Similarly, organs and organisms differ in their capacity to be resilient against external disturbances, such as changes in temperature. Furthermore, all developmental systems must be somewhat flexible to permit evolutionary change, and understanding robustness requires a comparative framework. Over the last decades, most research on developmental robustness has been focusing on specific model systems and organs. Hence, we lack tools that would allow cross‐species and cross‐organ comparisons. Here, we emphasize the need for a uniform framework to experimentally test and quantify robustness across study systems and suggest that the analysis of fluctuating asymmetry might be a powerful proxy to do so. Such a comparative framework will ultimately help to resolve why and how organs of the same and different species differ in their sensitivity to internal (e.g., mutations) and external (e.g., temperature) perturbations and at what level of biological organization buffering capacities exist and therefore create robustness of the developmental system.
Funder
Helsinki Institute of Life Science, Helsingin Yliopisto
Sigrid Juséliuksen Säätiö
John Templeton Foundation
Academy of Finland
Subject
Developmental Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
1 articles.
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1. Agency in living systems;Evolution & Development;2023-09-15