In the spotlight—Established researcher

IF 1.8 3区 生物学 Q3 DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY
Marcelo R. Sánchez-Villagra
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Website: www.msanchezlab.net

Google scholar page: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=taTQzw0AAAAJ

With whom and where did you study?

My undergraduate study in Biology was at Universidad Simón Bolívar in Caracas. After a year of fieldwork and diverse laboratory experiences, I went for a PhD at Duke University, with a thesis on marsupial mammal cranial development and evolution. I had two coadvisors: Kathleen Smith (comparative ontogenetics) and Richard Kay (paleontological work). This was followed by my Habilitation under my mentor Wolfgang Maier in Tübingen (Germany), where I worked on diverse topics of mammalian ontogeny and learned to teach on the comparative anatomy of diverse Deuterostomia groups. During my job at the Natural History Museum in London, I learned about modularity from hosting Anjali Goswami as a postdoc; from many paleontologists there and in Zurich I was inspired to contribute to “developmental paleontology.”

What got you interested in biology? When did you know EvoDevo was for you?

I came to Biology with a fascination for exploring the natural world; evolution provided an explanation to my questions on origins. My first interest was in reconstructing evolutionary trees, and for that solving homology questions required the ontogenetic perspective.

Exposure to EvoDevo ideas came from readings at graduate school at Duke on the neural crest, heterochrony, evolutionary novelties, and others—there I learned that EvoDevo was not just about Hox genes, and I became inspired by Pere Alberch's papers. I started to use the sequence heterochrony approach following the work of Kathleen Smith, Mike Richardson, and others, as this allowed me to examine developmental evolution with a comparative approach that did not require perfectly timed series and thus could be more inclusive in taxonomic sampling. When I learned about palaeohistology from my then postdoc Torsten Scheyer in Zurich, I realized that one could directly address matters of growth and life history in fossils, in addition to an approach based on phylogenetic bracket considerations. For my work on animal domestication, I saw the chance to bring a comparative ontogenetic perspective, and here the insights gained on neural crest development by detailed experimental studies in the work of Rich Schneider and others inform much of what we discussed about patterns of morphological diversification.

What do you see as the major challenges of EvoDevo?

I hope that EvoDevo embraces genuinely comparative ontogenetic research as a part of it, and that technological advances continue to contribute with discoveries but do not determine what can be funded or published, as EvoDevo remains a question-driven discipline as opposed to one driven by methods. Macroevolutionary questions that can be addressed only from a developmental perspective should continue to be part of a broad and pluralistic EvoDevo, as well as the explanation of phenotypic variation among populations within a species. I imagine that the examination of neglected groups of organisms or of organ systems will provide unanticipated insights on the amazing variation in developmental evolution.

It will be a challenge for the EvoDevo community to be inclusive in that it can be practiced by people across the world given the differential access to resources. Maybe some of the research in Eco-EvoDevo will serve to better understand environmental issues faced by humanity, but I suspect it is more likely that EvoDevo will be more about satisfying human intellectual curiosity.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

在聚光灯下,知名的研究者
网站:www.msanchezlab.netGoogle学者页面:https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=taTQzw0AAAAJWith你在哪里和谁学习?我本科的生物学专业是在加拉加斯的universsidad Simón Bolívar。经过一年的实地考察和丰富的实验室经验,我去杜克大学攻读博士学位,论文是关于有袋类哺乳动物的颅骨发育和进化。我有两个共同的顾问:凯瑟琳·史密斯(比较个体遗传学)和理查德·凯(古生物学)。随后,我在德国的宾根(tbingen)师从沃尔夫冈·迈尔(Wolfgang Maier),在那里我研究了哺乳动物个体发生的各种主题,并学会了教授各种后口动物群体的比较解剖学。在伦敦自然历史博物馆工作期间,我在接待博士后安贾利·戈斯瓦米(Anjali Goswami)时学到了模块化;从那里和苏黎世的许多古生物学家那里得到启发,我为“发育古生物学”做出了贡献。是什么让你对生物学感兴趣的?你什么时候知道evoldevo是为你准备的?我带着探索自然世界的迷恋来到生物学;进化论为我关于起源的问题提供了一个解释。我的第一个兴趣是重建进化树,因此解决同源性问题需要个体发生的观点。在杜克大学读研究生时,我接触到了EvoDevo的思想,内容涉及神经嵴、异时性、进化新颖性等。在那里,我了解到EvoDevo不仅仅是关于Hox基因的,我也受到了Pere Alberch论文的启发。在凯瑟琳·史密斯、迈克·理查森等人的工作之后,我开始使用序列异时性方法,因为这使我能够用一种比较的方法来研究发育进化,这种方法不需要完美的时序序列,因此可以在分类抽样中更具包容性。当我从当时在苏黎世做博士后的托尔斯滕·谢耶(Torsten Scheyer)那里学到古生物学时,我意识到,除了基于系统发育支架考虑的方法之外,还可以直接解决化石中的生长和生活史问题。对于我在动物驯化方面的工作,我看到了带来比较个体发生观点的机会,在这里,通过Rich Schneider和其他人的工作中详细的实验研究获得的关于神经嵴发育的见解为我们讨论的形态多样化模式提供了很多信息。你认为EvoDevo面临的主要挑战是什么?我希望EvoDevo将真正的比较个体发育研究作为其中的一部分,并且技术进步继续为发现做出贡献,但不决定什么可以被资助或发表,因为EvoDevo仍然是一个问题驱动的学科,而不是一个由方法驱动的学科。只有从发展的角度才能解决的宏观进化问题应该继续成为广泛和多元化进化的一部分,以及解释物种内种群之间的表型变异。我想,对被忽视的生物群体或器官系统的研究,将会对发育进化中惊人的变化提供意想不到的见解。对于EvoDevo社区来说,包容性将是一个挑战,因为它可以被世界各地的人们实践,因为他们可以获得不同的资源。也许Eco-EvoDevo中的一些研究将有助于更好地理解人类面临的环境问题,但我怀疑EvoDevo更有可能满足人类的求知欲。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
9.10%
发文量
63
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Developmental Evolution is a branch of evolutionary biology that integrates evidence and concepts from developmental biology, phylogenetics, comparative morphology, evolutionary genetics and increasingly also genomics, systems biology as well as synthetic biology to gain an understanding of the structure and evolution of organisms. The Journal of Experimental Zoology -B: Molecular and Developmental Evolution provides a forum where these fields are invited to bring together their insights to further a synthetic understanding of evolution from the molecular through the organismic level. Contributions from all these branches of science are welcome to JEZB. We particularly encourage submissions that apply the tools of genomics, as well as systems and synthetic biology to developmental evolution. At this time the impact of these emerging fields on developmental evolution has not been explored to its fullest extent and for this reason we are eager to foster the relationship of systems and synthetic biology with devo evo.
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