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      Why isn’t sex optional? Stem-cell competition, loss of regenerative capacity, and cancer in metazoan evolution

      review-article
      a , b
      Communicative & Integrative Biology
      Taylor & Francis
      Evo-devo, facultative sexuality, germline progenitors, Hamilton’s rule, PIWI/piRNA system, whole-body regeneration

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          ABSTRACT

          Animals that can reproduce vegetatively by fission or budding and also sexually via specialized gametes are found in all five primary animal lineages (Bilateria, Cnidaria, Ctenophora, Placozoa, Porifera). Many bilaterian lineages, including roundworms, insects, and most chordates, have lost the capability of vegetative reproduction and are obligately gametic. We suggest a developmental explanation for this evolutionary phenomenon: obligate gametic reproduction is the result of germline stem cells winning a winner-take-all competition with non-germline stem cells for control of reproduction and hence lineage survival. We develop this suggestion by extending Hamilton’s rule, which factors the relatedness between parties into the cost/benefit analysis that underpins cooperative behaviors, to include similarity of cellular state. We show how coercive or deceptive cell-cell signaling can be used to make costly cooperative behaviors appear less costly to the cooperating party. We then show how competition between stem-cell lineages can render an ancestral combination of vegetative reproduction with facultative sex unstable, with one or the other process driven to extinction. The increased susceptibility to cancer observed in obligately-sexual lineages is, we suggest, a side-effect of deceptive signaling that is exacerbated by the loss of whole-body regenerative abilities. We suggest a variety of experimental approaches for testing our predictions.

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          Most cited references107

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          The free-energy principle: a unified brain theory?

          A free-energy principle has been proposed recently that accounts for action, perception and learning. This Review looks at some key brain theories in the biological (for example, neural Darwinism) and physical (for example, information theory and optimal control theory) sciences from the free-energy perspective. Crucially, one key theme runs through each of these theories - optimization. Furthermore, if we look closely at what is optimized, the same quantity keeps emerging, namely value (expected reward, expected utility) or its complement, surprise (prediction error, expected cost). This is the quantity that is optimized under the free-energy principle, which suggests that several global brain theories might be unified within a free-energy framework.
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            The genetical evolution of social behaviour. I.

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              Evolution of ageing

              T Kirkwood (1977)
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Commun Integr Biol
                Commun Integr Biol
                Communicative & Integrative Biology
                Taylor & Francis
                1942-0889
                10 December 2020
                2020
                10 December 2020
                : 13
                : 1
                : 170-183
                Affiliations
                [a ]Caunes Minervois, France
                [b ]Allen Discovery Center at Tufts University; , Medford, MA, USA
                Author notes
                CONTACT Chris Fields fieldsres@ 123456gmail.com Chris Fields, 23 Rue des Lavandieries; , 11160 Caunes Minervois, FRANCE
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4812-0744
                https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7292-8084
                Article
                1838809
                10.1080/19420889.2020.1838809
                7746248
                33403054
                87f5bb86-d6e7-44d2-9366-1b4d3ebd78e5
                © 2020 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                Page count
                Figures: 4, References: 111, Pages: 14
                Categories
                Review
                Review

                Molecular biology
                evo-devo,facultative sexuality,germline progenitors,hamilton’s rule,piwi/pirna system,whole-body regeneration

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