Monaco TO. Essays on the emergence, evolution and maintenance od senescence mechanisms in animals [thesis]. São Paulo: Faculty of Medicine, University of Sao Paulo; SP (Brazil); 2011. 180p. The evolutionary basis of senescence is a long standing biological problem. Senescence, in the sense of progressive deterioration of an organism, is distinguished from aging, or the mere passage of time. Because, at least in mammals, aging and senescence occur simultaneously, the terms are wrongly taken as synonyms. Senescence seems explained by the wear of the organism, leading to a paradox facing the mechanisms of natural selection, because, being the biological machinery bearer of self-repair mechanisms, we would expect their improvement, with gradual elimination of the deterioration associated with aging. Historically, there were attempts to resolve this paradox by supposing that senescence confers an adaptive advantage, but this argument would require that older individuals were previously distinct from younger ones and is, therefore, circular. From mid-twentieth century, three hypotheses have prevailed. The mutation accumulation, proposed by Medawar (1951), proposes that the gradual decay of the force of selection with age favors the accumulation of deleterious genes expressed in advanced ages. The antagonistic pleiotropy, proposed by Williams (1957), argues that genes linked to beneficial and deleterious traits could, under certain conditions, be favorably selected. Finally, the disposable soma theory, proposed by Kirkwood (1975), suggests that organisms are positively selected when they invest in reproduction even at the expense of somatic maintenance. The dynamic description of the phenomena involved in each mechanism and the relative contribution of each one is still debated. The present work aims to develop stochastic computer models that mimic the conditions for each. We started by historical order, testing the mechanism proposed by Medawar, which is the subject of this thesis. The theory of mutation accumulation found critics who suggest that this mechanism would cause deleterious effects to synchronize in very advanced ages, causing senescence to be a sudden phenomenon limited to these ages. This is a contradiction with the experimental observation, because senescence is a gradual process and even wild animals exhibit senescent phenomena detectable in young ages. To keep the model consistent with the current knowledge on population genetics, this model included the effects of selection, genetic drift and different mutation rates. As predicted, in our simulations the mode of the age of onset of deleterious genes stabilized only in very advanced ages, near the end of the age distribution. Also as expected, these distributions ended in earlier ages in scenarios of higher extrinsic mortality. However, in all our simulations, there was more or less wide distribution of ages of onset around the mode. The distribution is enlarged with increased probabilities of mutation, suggesting that the ages of onset may spread thro...
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