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Probing Evolutionary Repeatability: Neutral and Double Changes and the Predictability of Evolutionary Adaptation

BACKGROUND: The question of how organisms adapt is among the most fundamental in evolutionary biology. Two recent studies investigated the evolution of Escherichia coli in response to challenge with the antibiotic cefotaxime. Studying five mutations in the β-lactamase gene that together confer signi...

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Autor principal: Roy, Scott William
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2643001/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19234610
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004500
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author Roy, Scott William
author_facet Roy, Scott William
author_sort Roy, Scott William
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description BACKGROUND: The question of how organisms adapt is among the most fundamental in evolutionary biology. Two recent studies investigated the evolution of Escherichia coli in response to challenge with the antibiotic cefotaxime. Studying five mutations in the β-lactamase gene that together confer significant antibiotic resistance, the authors showed a complex fitness landscape that greatly constrained the identity and order of intermediates leading from the initial wildtype genotype to the final resistant genotype. Out of 18 billion possible orders of single mutations leading from non-resistant to fully-resistant form, they found that only 27 (1.5×10(−7)%) pathways were characterized by consistently increasing resistance, thus only a tiny fraction of possible paths are accessible by positive selection. I further explore these data in several ways. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Allowing neutral changes (those that do not affect resistance) increases the number of accessible pathways considerably, from 27 to 629. Allowing multiple simultaneous mutations also greatly increases the number of accessible pathways. Allowing a single case of double mutation to occur along a pathway increases the number of pathways from 27 to 259, and allowing arbitrarily many pairs of simultaneous changes increases the number of possible pathways by more than 100 fold, to 4800. I introduce the metric ‘repeatability,’ the probability that two random trials will proceed via the exact same pathway. In general, I find that while the total number of accessible pathways is dramatically affected by allowing neutral or double mutations, the overall evolutionary repeatability is generally much less affected. CONCLUSIONS: These results probe the conceivable pathways available to evolution. Even when many of the assumptions of the analysis of Weinreich et al. (2006) are relaxed, I find that evolution to more highly cefotaxime resistant β-lactamase proteins is still highly repeatable.
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spelling pubmed-26430012009-02-23 Probing Evolutionary Repeatability: Neutral and Double Changes and the Predictability of Evolutionary Adaptation Roy, Scott William PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: The question of how organisms adapt is among the most fundamental in evolutionary biology. Two recent studies investigated the evolution of Escherichia coli in response to challenge with the antibiotic cefotaxime. Studying five mutations in the β-lactamase gene that together confer significant antibiotic resistance, the authors showed a complex fitness landscape that greatly constrained the identity and order of intermediates leading from the initial wildtype genotype to the final resistant genotype. Out of 18 billion possible orders of single mutations leading from non-resistant to fully-resistant form, they found that only 27 (1.5×10(−7)%) pathways were characterized by consistently increasing resistance, thus only a tiny fraction of possible paths are accessible by positive selection. I further explore these data in several ways. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Allowing neutral changes (those that do not affect resistance) increases the number of accessible pathways considerably, from 27 to 629. Allowing multiple simultaneous mutations also greatly increases the number of accessible pathways. Allowing a single case of double mutation to occur along a pathway increases the number of pathways from 27 to 259, and allowing arbitrarily many pairs of simultaneous changes increases the number of possible pathways by more than 100 fold, to 4800. I introduce the metric ‘repeatability,’ the probability that two random trials will proceed via the exact same pathway. In general, I find that while the total number of accessible pathways is dramatically affected by allowing neutral or double mutations, the overall evolutionary repeatability is generally much less affected. CONCLUSIONS: These results probe the conceivable pathways available to evolution. Even when many of the assumptions of the analysis of Weinreich et al. (2006) are relaxed, I find that evolution to more highly cefotaxime resistant β-lactamase proteins is still highly repeatable. Public Library of Science 2009-02-23 /pmc/articles/PMC2643001/ /pubmed/19234610 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004500 Text en Roy. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Roy, Scott William
Probing Evolutionary Repeatability: Neutral and Double Changes and the Predictability of Evolutionary Adaptation
title Probing Evolutionary Repeatability: Neutral and Double Changes and the Predictability of Evolutionary Adaptation
title_full Probing Evolutionary Repeatability: Neutral and Double Changes and the Predictability of Evolutionary Adaptation
title_fullStr Probing Evolutionary Repeatability: Neutral and Double Changes and the Predictability of Evolutionary Adaptation
title_full_unstemmed Probing Evolutionary Repeatability: Neutral and Double Changes and the Predictability of Evolutionary Adaptation
title_short Probing Evolutionary Repeatability: Neutral and Double Changes and the Predictability of Evolutionary Adaptation
title_sort probing evolutionary repeatability: neutral and double changes and the predictability of evolutionary adaptation
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2643001/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19234610
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0004500
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