Litcius/Paper detail

A pan-metazoan view of germline-soma distinction challenges our understanding of how the metazoan germline evolves

Dominic K. Devlin, Austen R. D. Ganley, Nobuto Takeuchi

2023Current Opinion in Systems Biology10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

A germline-soma distinction — irreversible differentiation from reproductive germline cells to sterile somatic cells — is a landmark of cellular cooperation in metazoans. Traditionally, this distinction was considered a property of only some metazoan taxa, such as vertebrates and insects. However, recent studies on a number of other metazoan taxa are challenging this traditional perspective, suggesting that a germline-soma distinction is widespread among metazoans. Here, we review recent molecular and cellular evidence supporting this suggestion and emphasise the difference between germline-soma distinction and germline segregation. We also outline the considerable diversity among metazoans in germline specification, segregation and regeneration. We finish by discussing how evolutionary explanations for this diversity can be investigated by harnessing theoretical modelling approaches.

Topics & Concepts

GermlineSomaBiologyEvolutionary biologySomatic cellDiversity (politics)GeneticsSociologyNeuroscienceGeneAnthropologyInsect and Arachnid Ecology and BehaviorPlanarian Biology and ElectrostimulationAnimal Behavior and Reproduction