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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Tropical social wasps
- Environmentally determined forms in social wasps
- Developmental plasticity definition
- Phenotype definition
- Developmental versus phenotypic plasticity
- Modularity as plasticity
- Developmental flexibility of human beings
- Plasticity and development
- Decision points and branching pathways
- Hemoglobin heme groups
- Iron atom in heme group
- What if iron is in short supply?
- A unique remedy for iron deficiency
- Iron storage disease (hemochromatosis)
- Alternative phenotypes: Sagittaria sagittifolia
- Sagittaria sagittifolia on land and in water
- “Predictive” alternative phenotypes
- Size-dependent switch in beetles
- Adaptive decisions in fetal stage
- Fetal causes of adult disease
- Example of size dependent tactics
- Phenotypic accommodation
- Phenotypic accommodation: bipedal locomotion
- Phenotypic accommodation in morphology
- Results of phenotypic accommodation
- Interchangeability: genetic and environmental
- Interchangeability in melanization
- Equivalent phenotypic changes
- Interchangeability: sex determination
- Regulatory complexity
- Larviform adults
- Multiple pathways to neoteny
- Same phenotype - different routes
- Myth of single-gene control
- Gene for obesity
- A gene for every trait
- Everything is determined by genes
- Human genome: the complete blueprint
- Life cycle: development begins with fertilization
- Eggs as organisms: Drosophilid flies
- Active sperm reception of a starfish egg
- Mate-selection behavior by the egg pronucleus
- Anuran embryo as extension of phenotype
- Continuity of the phenotype
- Developmentally plastic phenotypes
- Developmental plasticity and evolution
- References (1)
- References (2)
Topics Covered
- Developmental plasticity
- Genes and environment in development
- Adaptive developmental decisions and their betrayal if conditions change
- Phenotypic accommodation
- Multiple pathways
- Myth of single gene control
- Blueprints and programs as false metaphors
- Cross-generational continuity of the phenotype
- Origins of novel phenotypes including disease
Links
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Talk Citation
West-Eberhard, M.J. (2020, August 16). Developmental plasticity, evolution and the origins of disease [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved December 27, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/SEMQ4196.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Dr. Mary Jane West-Eberhard has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.
Developmental plasticity, evolution and the origins of disease
A selection of talks on Genetics & Epigenetics
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
This
lecture is about the connections
between developmental
plasticity, evolution,
and the origins of disease.
My name is Mary Jane West-Eberhard,
and I work for the Smithsonian
Tropical Research
Institute in Panama,
while living most of
the time in Costa Rica.
I confess that I am not
a medical researcher.
I am an evolutionary biologist.
My research is primarily field work
on the natural history and behavior
of tropical social wasps.
0:24
Observations on these exquisitely
conditioned sensitive organisms
led first to an interest in the
origin of workers and queens.
0:32
Which of these two forms, as
developed by an individual female,
is environmentally determined?
From studying these, I got
interested in developmental
plasticity in general.
0:44
Developmental plasticity is
simply the responsiveness
of the phenotype to new
inputs from the external
or the internal environment.
It's phenotypic change
without genetic change.
0:56
The word phenotype, of course,
refers to all traits of an organism
other than its genes.
This includes molecular
products of genes,
morphology, physiology, and
behavior, including learned traits.
It includes nervous tics,
remembered phone numbers, and spots
on the lung following
a bout with the flu.
That is, phenotypes can be
adaptive or pathological,
permanent or temporary, and
typical or atypical of a species.
1:23
Developmental
plasticity is a broader
concept than phenotypic plasticity.
Phenotypic plasticity
is responsiveness
to the external environment.
Developmental plasticity
includes responses
to the internal environment.
This means that includes
sensitivity to things
like gene products within cells and
the action of hormones on tissues.
Developmental plasticity
includes modularity of structure.