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Glucocorticoids, the evolution of the stress-response, and the primate predicament
Author(s) -
Robert M. Sapolsky
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
neurobiology of stress
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.481
H-Index - 33
ISSN - 2352-2895
DOI - 10.1016/j.ynstr.2021.100320
Subject(s) - vertebrate , stressor , evolutionary biology , biology , glucocorticoid , psychosocial , primate , ecology , zoology , neuroscience , psychology , gene , genetics , endocrinology , psychotherapist
The adrenocortical stress-response is extraordinarily conserved across mammals, birds, fish, reptiles, and amphibians, suggesting that it has been present during the hundreds of millions of years of vertebrate existence. Given that antiquity, it is relatively recent that primate social complexity has evolved to the point that, uniquely, life can be dominated by chronic psychosocial stress. This paper first reviews adrenocortical evolution during vertebrate history. This produces a consistent theme of there being an evolutionary tradeoff between the protective effects of glucocorticoids during an ongoing physical stressor, versus the adverse long-term consequences of excessive glucocorticoid secretion; how this tradeoff is resolved depends on particular life history strategies of populations, species and vertebrate taxa. This contrasts with adrenocortical evolution in socially complex primates, who mal-adaptively activate the classic vertebrate stress-response during chronic psychosocial stress. This emphasizes the rather unique and ongoing selective forces sculpting the stress-response in primates, including humans.

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