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Planarian flatworms are obligate, multicellular organisms that cannot survive and reproduce independently as individual cells. Evolutionary processes that promote alignment of interest between cells are nevertheless absent. First, planarians are not necessarily clonal. Each worm is comprised of genetically distinct stem cell lineages. Asexual reproduction is achieved by "ripping apart": each worm is, therefore, a composite of cells derived from the parent. Neither is the germ line irreversibly determined - stem cell lineages can compete to form the germ line. How then is the integrity of the individual organism maintained?
I intend to use my Wissenschaftskolleg Fellowship to design a research programme to address these questions. The challenge is partly technological - how can we experimentally manipulate levels of conflict between cells within organisms or measure the consequences of conflict for cell lineages and the fitness of individual worms? - and partly theoretical - to what extent can we consider stem cell lineages to be distinct selective units; how can we explain species diversity in the levels of conflict? These two sets of challenges are intertwined - understanding the precise evolutionary questions relevant to this system will be key to designing appropriate experiments and maximize the opportunities arising from this extraordinary organism to advance our understanding of multicellular life forms.
Recommended Reading
Andersen, S., R. L. Marvig, S. Molin, H. Krogh Johansen, and A. S. Griffin (2015). "Long-term social dynamics drive loss of function in pathogenic bacteria." PNAS 112, 10756-10761.
Cornwallis, C. K., S. A. West, K. Davis, and A. S. Griffin (2010). "Promiscuity and the evolutionary transition to complex societies." Nature 466, 969-972.
© private
2018/2019
Ashleigh Griffin, Ph.D.
Professor of Evolutionary Biology
Universität Oxford
Born in 1972 in Dundee, Scotland
Studied Zoology at the University of Edinburgh
Schwerpunkt
Die großen Übergänge in der Evolution der Organismen
Arbeitsvorhaben
Developing a New Model System for Research into the Major Evolutionary Transition to Multicellularity
Research on the evolution of multicellularity has focused on organisms that retain the ability to survive and reproduce as single cells, such as slime moulds and algae. In this sense, they have not undergone a major evolutionary transition to obligate multicellularity. Complex multicellular organisms, such as ourselves, have evolved life histories that promote harmony of purpose between our cells. This is why we lack examples of adaptation to genetic conflict within complex multicellular organisms.Planarian flatworms are obligate, multicellular organisms that cannot survive and reproduce independently as individual cells. Evolutionary processes that promote alignment of interest between cells are nevertheless absent. First, planarians are not necessarily clonal. Each worm is comprised of genetically distinct stem cell lineages. Asexual reproduction is achieved by "ripping apart": each worm is, therefore, a composite of cells derived from the parent. Neither is the germ line irreversibly determined - stem cell lineages can compete to form the germ line. How then is the integrity of the individual organism maintained?
I intend to use my Wissenschaftskolleg Fellowship to design a research programme to address these questions. The challenge is partly technological - how can we experimentally manipulate levels of conflict between cells within organisms or measure the consequences of conflict for cell lineages and the fitness of individual worms? - and partly theoretical - to what extent can we consider stem cell lineages to be distinct selective units; how can we explain species diversity in the levels of conflict? These two sets of challenges are intertwined - understanding the precise evolutionary questions relevant to this system will be key to designing appropriate experiments and maximize the opportunities arising from this extraordinary organism to advance our understanding of multicellular life forms.
Recommended Reading
Andersen, S., R. L. Marvig, S. Molin, H. Krogh Johansen, and A. S. Griffin (2015). "Long-term social dynamics drive loss of function in pathogenic bacteria." PNAS 112, 10756-10761.
Cornwallis, C. K., S. A. West, K. Davis, and A. S. Griffin (2010). "Promiscuity and the evolutionary transition to complex societies." Nature 466, 969-972.
Im Kolleg entstanden 21.07.22
Multicellularity in Animals : The Potential for Within-Organism Conflict
National Academy of Sciences
weitere Publikationen in der Fellowbibliothek
Köpfe und Ideen 2019
Gezähmte Konflikte
ein Porträt von Jacobus J. (Koos) Boomsma, Ashleigh Griffin, Nancy A. Moran, Howard Ochman, David C. Queller, Joan E. Strass... von Manuela Lenzen