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Molecular Clock of Neutral Mutations in a Fitness-Increasing Evolutionary Process
- Source :
- PLoS Genetics, Vol 11, Iss 7, p e1005392 (2015), PLoS Genetics
- Publication Year :
- 2015
- Publisher :
- Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2015.
-
Abstract
- The molecular clock of neutral mutations, which represents linear mutation fixation over generations, is theoretically explained by genetic drift in fitness-steady evolution or hitchhiking in adaptive evolution. The present study is the first experimental demonstration for the molecular clock of neutral mutations in a fitness-increasing evolutionary process. The dynamics of genome mutation fixation in the thermal adaptive evolution of Escherichia coli were evaluated in a prolonged evolution experiment in duplicated lineages. The cells from the continuously fitness-increasing evolutionary process were subjected to genome sequencing and analyzed at both the population and single-colony levels. Although the dynamics of genome mutation fixation were complicated by the combination of the stochastic appearance of adaptive mutations and clonal interference, the mutation fixation in the population was simply linear over generations. Each genome in the population accumulated 1.6 synonymous and 3.1 non-synonymous neutral mutations, on average, by the spontaneous mutation accumulation rate, while only a single genome in the population occasionally acquired an adaptive mutation. The neutral mutations that preexisted on the single genome hitchhiked on the domination of the adaptive mutation. The successive fixation processes of the 128 mutations demonstrated that hitchhiking and not genetic drift were responsible for the coincidence of the spontaneous mutation accumulation rate in the genome with the fixation rate of neutral mutations in the population. The molecular clock of neutral mutations to the fitness-increasing evolution suggests that the numerous neutral mutations observed in molecular phylogenetic trees may not always have been fixed in fitness-steady evolution but in adaptive evolution.<br />Author Summary Mutations that have little influence on biological function are referred to as neutral mutations and frequently appear in molecular phylogenetic analyses. The fixation of neutral mutations in populations has been attributed to genetic drift in fitness-steady evolutionary processes or hitchhiking in adaptive evolution. We examined the fitness-increasing evolution of Escherichia coli for thermal adaptation to observe the fixation dynamics of genome-wide mutations. In the adaptive evolution, all genomes in the population equally accumulated neutral mutations by replication errors. The infrequent occurrence of an adaptive mutation on one of the genomes by chance resulted in the fixation of the neutral mutations that had pre-accumulated in the same genome by hitchhiking. Via successive hitchhiking events, the neutral mutations were fixed in the population linearly over generations at the same rate as the spontaneous mutation accumulation rate in the genome. The molecular clock of neutral mutations thus functions even in adaptive evolution. The evolutionary period characterized by the accumulation of numerous neutral mutations observed in molecular phylogenetic trees may not be specific to neutral evolution but may occur in adaptive evolution as well.
- Subjects :
- Cancer Research
Mutation rate
lcsh:QH426-470
Biology
Adaptive mutation
Molecular evolution
Genetics
Escherichia coli
Selection, Genetic
Molecular clock
Molecular Biology
Genetics (clinical)
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Clonal interference
Genetic Drift
Temperature
Sequence Analysis, DNA
Adaptation, Physiological
lcsh:Genetics
Evolutionary biology
Mutation Fixation
Mutation
Genetic Fitness
Directed Molecular Evolution
Neutral theory of molecular evolution
Neutral mutation
Research Article
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 15537404 and 15537390
- Volume :
- 11
- Issue :
- 7
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- PLoS Genetics
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....dfeba911cc2fe694ac92d53ad51d9833