Thursday, April 12, 2018

Homeostasis as the mechanism of evolution

By John Torday, Biology (Basel). 2015 Sep; 4(3): 573–590. The abstract:

"Homeostasis is conventionally thought of merely as a synchronic (same time) servo-mechanism that maintains the status quo for organismal physiology. However, when seen from the perspective of developmental physiology, homeostasis is a robust, dynamic, intergenerational, diachronic (across-time) mechanism for the maintenance, perpetuation and modification of physiologic structure and function. The integral relationships generated by cell-cell signaling for the mechanisms of embryogenesis, physiology and repair provide the needed insight to the scale-free universality of the homeostatic principle, offering a novel opportunity for a Systems approach to Biology. Starting with the inception of life itself, with the advent of reproduction during meiosis and mitosis, moving forward both ontogenetically and phylogenetically through the evolutionary steps involved in adaptation to an ever-changing environment, Biology and Evolution Theory need no longer default to teleology."

1 comment:

  1. "If in effect life is a continuum that emanates from the unicellular state, then homeostasis functions at all levels of biology as a fractal, independent of scale [4]. So the properties of allostasis are a higher-level expression of the same homeostatic principles expressed at the cellular, tissue and organ levels. The examples used by McEwen and Wingfield [31,32]—blood pressure, metabolism, pH, complex patterns of bird migration—are all derived from homeostatic regulation of the unicellular state, having evolved in support of multicellular organisms. Migratory birds were used by Ernst Mayr [80] to exemplify the difference between proximate and ultimate causation in evolutionary biology, which drove a wedge between those interested in structure-function relationships (proximate) and the process of evolution itself (ultimate), generating volumes of descriptive data, undermining any attempt to understand how and why evolution has occurred based on principles of cell biology [4]."

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