Programmed Life Span in the Context of Evolvability
Authored by Joshua Mitteldorf, Andre C R Martins
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1086/677387
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Abstract
Population turnover is necessary for progressive evolution. In the
context of a niche with fixed carrying capacity, aging contributes to
the rate of population turnover. Theoretically, a population in which
death is programmed on a fixed schedule can evolve more rapidly than one
in which population turnover is left to a random death rate. Could aging
evolve on this basis? Quantitative realization of this idea is
problematic, since the short-term individual fitness cost is likely to
eliminate any hypothetical gene for programmed death before the
long-term benefit can be realized. In 2011, one of us proposed the first
quantitative model based on this mechanism that robustly evolves a
finite, programmed life span. That model was based on a viscous
population in a rapidly changing environment. Here, we strip this model
to its essence and eliminate the assumption of environmental change. We
conclude that there is no obvious way in which this model is
unrealistic, and that it may indeed capture an important principle of
nature's workings. We suggest aging may be understood within the context
of the emerging science of evolvability.
Tags
sexual selection
Multilevel selection
Natural-selection
Genetic-variation
Evolutionary-theories
Telomere length
Epigenetic
inheritance
Caloric restriction
History
evolution
Aging program