Repeatability and Contingency in the Evolution of a Key Innovation in Phage Lambda

Author:

Meyer Justin R.12,Dobias Devin T.3,Weitz Joshua S.4,Barrick Jeffrey E.25,Quick Ryan T.6,Lenski Richard E.126

Affiliation:

1. Department of Zoology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824, USA.

2. BEACON Center for the Study of Evolution in Action, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824, USA.

3. Department of Biology, Washington University, St. Louis, MO 63130, USA.

4. School of Biology and School of Physics, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA 30332, USA.

5. Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Institute for Cellular and Molecular Biology, The University of Texas, Austin, TX 78712, USA.

6. Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824, USA.

Abstract

Natural Selection Caught in the Act Understanding how new functions evolve has been of long-standing interest. However, the number of mutations needed to evolve a key innovation is rarely known, or whether other sets of mutations would also suffice, whether the intermediate steps are driven by natural selection, or how contingent the outcome is on steps along the way. Meyer et al. (p. 428 ; see the Perspective by Thompson ) answer these questions for a case in which phage lambda evolved the ability to infect its host Escherichia coli through a novel receptor. This shift required four mutations, which accumulated under natural selection in concert with coevolution of the host. However, when Tenaillon et al. (p. 457 ) exposed 115 lines of E. coli to high temperature and sequenced them, adaptation occurred through many different genetic paths, showing parallelism at the level of genes and interacting protein complexes, but only rarely at the nucleotide level. Thus, epistasis—nonadditive genetic interaction—is likely to play an important part in the process of adaptation to this environment.

Funder

Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency

National Institutes of Health

National Science Foundation

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference73 articles.

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2. S. Gavrilets in Toward an Extended Evolutionary Synthesis M. Pigliucci G. Muller Eds. (MIT Press Cambridge MA 2010).

3. C. Darwin The Origin of Species (Murray London 1859).

4. R. A. Fisher The Genetical Theory of Natural Selection (Clarendon Press Oxford 1930).

5. U. Dieckmann M. Doebeli J. A. J. Metz Eds. Adaptive Speciation (Cambridge Univ. Press Cambridge UK 2004).

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