Aneuploidy Can Be an Evolutionary Diversion on the Path to Adaptation

Author:

Kohanovski Ilia12,Pontz Martin1,Vande Zande Pétra3ORCID,Selmecki Anna3,Dahan Orna4,Pilpel Yitzhak4,Yona Avihu H5,Ram Yoav1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Zoology, Faculty of Life Sciences, Tel Aviv University , Tel Aviv , Israel

2. School of Computer Science, Reichman University , Herzliya , Israel

3. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Minnesota Medical School , Minneapolis, MN , USA

4. Department of Molecular Genetics, Weizmann Institute of Science , Rehovot , Israel

5. Institute of Biochemistry, Food Science and Nutrition, Robert H. Smith Faculty of Agriculture, Food and Environment, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem , Rehovot , Israel

Abstract

Abstract Aneuploidy is common in eukaryotes, often leading to decreased fitness. However, evidence from fungi and human tumur cells suggests that specific aneuploidies can be beneficial under stressful conditions and facilitate adaptation. In a previous evolutionary experiment with yeast, populations evolving under heat stress became aneuploid, only to later revert to euploidy after beneficial mutations accumulated. It was therefore suggested that aneuploidy is a “stepping stone” on the path to adaptation. Here, we test this hypothesis. We use Bayesian inference to fit an evolutionary model with both aneuploidy and mutation to the experimental results. We then predict the genotype frequency dynamics during the experiment, demonstrating that most of the evolved euploid population likely did not descend from aneuploid cells, but rather from the euploid wild-type population. Our model shows how the beneficial mutation supply—the product of population size and beneficial mutation rate–determines the evolutionary dynamics: with low supply, much of the evolved population descends from aneuploid cells; but with high supply, beneficial mutations are generated fast enough to outcompete aneuploidy due to its inherent fitness cost. Our results suggest that despite its potential fitness benefits under stress, aneuploidy can be an evolutionary “diversion” rather than a “stepping stone”: it can delay, rather than facilitate, the adaptation of the population, and cells that become aneuploid may leave less descendants compared to cells that remain diploid.

Funder

Israel Science Foundation

US–Israel Binational Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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