Open access · CC-BY
via OpenAlex
Unusual occurrence of domestication syndrome amongst African mole-rats: Is the naked mole-rat a domestic animal?
Guillermo Serrano Nájera, Koryu Kin
Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution · 2022 · ▲ 1 citations
Abstract
The Naked mole-rat (NMR) is becoming a prominent model organism due to its peculiar traits, such as eusociality, extreme longevity, cancer resistance, and reduced pain sensitivity. It belongs to the African mole-rats (AMR), a family of subterranean rodents that includes solitary, cooperative breeding and eusocial species. We identified and quantified the domestication syndrome (DS) across AMR, a set of morphological and behavioural traits significantly more common and pronounced amongst domesticated animals than in their wild counterparts. Surprisingly, the NMR shows apparent DS traits when compared to the solitary AMR. Animals can self-domesticate when a reduction of the fear response is naturally selected, such as in islands with no predators, or to improve the group’s harmony in cooperative breeding species. The DS may be caused by alterations in the physiology of the neural crest cells (NCC), a transient population of cells that generate a full range of tissues during development. The NCC contribute to organs responsible for transmitting the fear response and various other tissues, including craniofacial bones. Therefore, mutations affecting the NCC can manifest as behavioural and morphological alterations in many structures across the body, as seen in neurocristopathies. We observed that all social AMRs are chisel-tooth diggers, an adaption to hard soils that requires the flattening of the skull. We hypothesise that chisel-tooth digging could impose a selective pressure on the NCC that triggered the DS’s appearance, possibly facilitating the evolution of sociality. Finally, we discuss how DS traits are neutral or beneficial for the subterranean niche, strategies to test this hypothesis and report well-studied mutations in the NMR that are associated with the NCC physiology or with the control of the fear response. In conclusion, we argue that many of the NMR’s unconventional traits are compatible with the DS and provide a hypothesis about its origins. Our model proposes a novel avenue to enhance the understanding of the extraordinary biology of the NMR.
◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:
Provenance
- Source
- OpenAlex
- DOI
- 10.3389/fevo.2022.987177
- Canonical
- link ↗
- Fetched
- 2026-07-07 MST
Cite this
APA
Nájera, G.S., & Kin, K. (2022). Unusual occurrence of domestication syndrome amongst African mole-rats: Is the naked mole-rat a domestic animal?. <em>Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution</em>. https://doi.org/10.3389/fevo.2022.987177
Vancouver
Nájera GS, Kin K. Unusual occurrence of domestication syndrome amongst African mole-rats: Is the naked mole-rat a domestic animal?. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution. 2022. doi:10.3389/fevo.2022.987177.
BibTeX
@article{guillermo2022Unusua,
title = {Unusual occurrence of domestication syndrome amongst African mole-rats: Is the naked mole-rat a domestic animal?},
author = {Guillermo Serrano Nájera and Koryu Kin},
journal = {Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution},
year = {2022},
doi = {10.3389/fevo.2022.987177},
}
Research neighborhood
References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.
Related findings
GeroScience 2025
Open access · CC-BY
Longevity through immunity: the unusual naked mole-rat immune system
Open Access Animal Physiology 2015
Open access · CC-BY
The naked mole-rat as an animal model in biomedical research: current perspectives
Nature Communications 2024
Open access · CC-BY
Evolution of T cells in the cancer-resistant naked mole-rat
American Journal of Hypertension 2020
Open access · OA
Mitophagy in Hypertension-Associated Premature Vascular Aging
Nature Communications 2014
Open access · OA
A dual role for autophagy in a murine model of lung cancer
Nature Aging 2022
Open access · CC-BY