The evolution of endothermy is one of the most intriguing and consistently debated topics in vertebrate biology, but the proximate mechanisms that mediated its evolution are unknown. Here, we suggest that the function of thyroid hormone in regulating physiological processes in response to cold is key to understanding the evolution of endothermy. We argue that the capacity of early chordates to produce thyroid hormone internally was the first step in this evolutionary process. Selection could then act on the capacity of thyroid hormone to regulate metabolism, muscle force production and cardiac performance to maintain their function against the negative thermodynamic effects of decreasing temperature. Thyroid-mediated cold acclimation would have been the principal selective advantage. The actions of thyroid hormone during cold acclimation in zebrafish are very similar to its role during endothermic thermogenesis. The thyroid-mediated increases in metabolism and locomotor performance in ectotherms eventually resulted in sufficient heat production to affect body temperature. From this point onwards, increased body temperature per se could be of selective advantage and reinforce thyroid-induced increases in physiological rates. Selection for increased body temperature would promote those mechanisms that maximise heat production, such as increased Na + /K + -ATPase activity, futile cycling by SERCA, and mitochondrial uncoupling, all of which are regulated by thyroid hormone. The specific end point of this broader evolutionary process would be endothermic thermoregulation. However, considering the evolution of endothermy in isolation is misleading because the selective advantages that drove the evolutionary process were independent from endothermy. In other words, without the selective advantages of thyroid-mediated cold acclimation in fish, there would be no endotherms.
KEY WORDS: Thermoregulation, Locomotion, Metabolism, Heat production, Aerobic capacity
IntroductionThe advantages that have led to the evolution of an endothermic physiology are still under debate. A widely accepted model is that directional selection for incremental increases in aerobic capacity and sustained activity led to the evolution of endothermy (the 'aerobic capacity' model) (Bennett and Ruben, 1979;Nespolo et al., 2011). The greater scope for physical activity means that endotherms tire less quickly and are therefore better able to forage, escape predators and migrate (Clarke and Pörtner, 2010). Increased physical activity requires a greater capacity for energy (ATP) production, and oxidative metabolic capacities of endotherms are consequently an order of magnitude greater than those of ectotherms COMMENTARY School of Biological Sciences A08, University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia.*Author for correspondence (frank.seebacher@sydney.edu.au) (Bennett and Ruben, 1979). In contrast, the 'parental care' model suggests that increased non-shivering thermogenesis permitted parents to control incubation temperatures and thereby provided the...