Fixation dynamics of beneficial alleles in prokaryotic polyploid chromosomes and plasmids

Author:

Santer Mario1,Kupczok Anne23ORCID,Dagan Tal2ORCID,Uecker Hildegard1

Affiliation:

1. Research Group Stochastic Evolutionary Dynamics, Department of Evolutionary Theory, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology , 24306 Plön, Germany

2. Institute of General Microbiology, Kiel University , 24118 Kiel, Germany

3. Bioinformatics Group, Department of Plant Sciences, Wageningen University & Research , 6708PB Wageningen, The Netherlands

Abstract

Abstract Theoretical population genetics has been mostly developed for sexually reproducing diploid and for monoploid (haploid) organisms, focusing on eukaryotes. The evolution of bacteria and archaea is often studied by models for the allele dynamics in monoploid populations. However, many prokaryotic organisms harbor multicopy replicons—chromosomes and plasmids—and theory for the allele dynamics in populations of polyploid prokaryotes remains lacking. Here, we present a population genetics model for replicons with multiple copies in the cell. Using this model, we characterize the fixation process of a dominant beneficial mutation at 2 levels: the phenotype and the genotype. Our results show that depending on the mode of replication and segregation, the fixation of the mutant phenotype may precede genotypic fixation by many generations; we term this time interval the heterozygosity window. We furthermore derive concise analytical expressions for the occurrence and length of the heterozygosity window, showing that it emerges if the copy number is high and selection strong. Within the heterozygosity window, the population is phenotypically adapted, while both alleles persist in the population. Replicon ploidy thus allows for the maintenance of genetic variation following phenotypic adaptation and consequently for reversibility in adaptation to fluctuating environmental conditions.

Funder

Max Planck Society

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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