The evolution of endometrial cycles and menstruation

被引:82
作者
Strassmann, BI
机构
[1] Department of Anthropology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
关键词
D O I
10.1086/419369
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
According to a recent hypothesis, menstruation evolved to protect the uterus and oviducts from sperm-borne Pathogens by dislodging infected endometrial tissue and delivering immune cells to the uterine cavity. This hypothesis predicts the following: (1) uterine pathogens should be more prevalent before menses than after menses, (2) in the life life histories of females, the timing of menstruation should track pathogen burden, and (3) in primates, the copiousness of menstruation should increase with the promiscuity of the breeding system. I tested these predictions and they were not upheld by the evidence. I propose tile alternative hypothesis that the uterine endometrium is shed/resorbed whenever implantation fails because cyclical regression and renewal is energetically less costly than maintaining the endometrium in the metabolically active state required for implantation. In the regressed state, oxygen consumption (per mg protein/h) in hu,nan endometria declines nearly sevenfold. Tile cyclicity in endometrial oxygen consumption is one component of the whole body cyclicity in metabolic rate caused by the action of the ovarian steroids on both endometrial and nonendometrial tissue. Metabolic rate is at least 7% lower, on average, during the follicular phase than during the luteal phase in women, which signifies an estimated energy savings of 53 MJ over four cycles, or nearly six days worth of food. Thus, the menstrual cycle revs up and revs down, economizing on the energy costs of reproduction. This economy is greatest during the nonbreeding season and other periods of amenorrhea when the endometrium, remains in a regressed state and ovarian cycling is absent for a prolonged period of lime. Twelve months of amenorrhea save an estimated 130 MJ, or the energy required by one woman for nearly half a month. By helping females to maintain body mass, energy economy will promote female fitness in any environment in which fecundity and survivorship is constrained by the food supply. Endometrial economy may be of ancient evolutionary origin because similar reproductive structures, such as the oviducts of lizards, also regress when a fertilized egg is unlikely to be present. Regression of the endometrium is usually accompanied by reabsorption, but in some species as much as one third of the endometrial and vascular tissue is sited as the menses. Rather than having an adaptive basis in ecology or behavior, variation in the degree of menstrual bleeding in primates shows a striking correlation with phylogeny. The endometrial microvasculature is designed to provide the blood supply to the endometrium and tile placenta, and external bleeding appears io ire a side effect of endometrial regression that arises when there is too much blood and other tissue for complete reabsorption. Tire copious bleeding of humans and chimps can be attributed ta tire large she of tire uterus relative to adult female body size and to the design of the microvasculature in catarrhines.
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页码:181 / 220
页数:40
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