The "evolutionary field" hypothesis. Non-Mendelian transgenerational inheritance mediates diversification and evolution Corrado Spadafora
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2017
Abstract:
Epigenetics is increasingly regarded as a potential contributing factor to evolution. Building on apparently
unrelated results, here I propose that RNA-containing nanovesicles, predominantly small regulatory
RNAs, are released from somatic tissues in the bloodstream, cross the Weismann barrier, reach the
epididymis, and are eventually taken up by spermatozoa; henceforth the information is delivered to
oocytes at fertilization. In the model, a LINE-1-encoded reverse transcriptase activity, present in spermatozoa
and early embryos, plays a key role in amplifying and propagating these RNAs as extrachromosomal
structures. It may be conceived that, over generations, the cumulative effects of spermdelivered
RNAs would cross a critical threshold and overcome the buffering capacity of embryos. As a
whole, the process can promote the generation of an information-containing platform that drives the
reshaping of the embryonic epigenetic landscape with the potential to generate ontogenic changes and
redirect the evolutionary trajectory. Over time, evolutionary significant, stably acquired variations could
be generated through the process. The interplay between these elements defines the concept of
"evolutionary field", a self-consistent, comprehensive information-containing platform and a source of
discontinuous evolutionary novelty.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Spermatozoa Reverse transcriptase Embryogenesis LINE-1 retrotransposons Nanovescicles Weismann barrier Transgenerational inheritance
Elenco autori:
Spadafora, Corrado
Link alla scheda completa:
Pubblicato in: