Fitness-dependent mutation rates in finite populations.
نویسندگان
چکیده
Mutation rate may be condition dependent, whereby individuals in poor condition, perhaps from high mutation load, have higher mutation rates than individuals in good condition. Agrawal (J. Evol. Biol.15, 2002, 1004) explored the basic properties of fitness-dependent mutation rate (FDMR) in infinite populations and reported some heuristic results for finite populations. The key parameter governing how infinite populations evolve under FDMR is the curvature (k) of the relationship between fitness and mutation rate. We extend Agrawal's analysis to finite populations and consider dominance and epistasis. In finite populations, the probability of long-term existence depends on k. In sexual populations, positive curvature leads to low equilibrium mutation rate, whereas negative curvature results in high mutation rate. In asexual populations, negative curvature results in rapid extinction via 'mutational meltdown', whereas positive curvature sometimes allows persistence. We speculate that fitness-dependent mutation rate may provide the conditions for genetic architecture to diverge between sexual and asexual taxa.
منابع مشابه
Quasispecies can exist under neutral drift at finite population sizes
We investigate the evolutionary dynamics of a finite population of RNA sequences adapting to a neutral fitness landscape. Despite the lack of differential fitness between viable sequences, we observe typical properties of adaptive evolution, such as increase of mean fitness over time and punctuated equilibrium transitions. We discuss the implications of these results for understanding evolution...
متن کاملOpen Problems in the Spectral Analysis of Evolutionary Dynamics
For broad classes of selection and genetic operators, the dynamics of evolution can be completely characterized by the spectra of the operators that define the dynamics, in both infinite and finite populations. These classes include generalized mutation, frequency-independent selection, uniparental inheritance. Several open questions exist regarding these spectra: 1. For a given fitness functio...
متن کاملMutability as an altruistic trait in finite asexual populations.
Mutation rate (MR) is a crucial determinant of the evolutionary process. Optimal MR may enable efficient evolutionary searching and therefore increase the fitness of the population over time. Nevertheless, individuals may favor MRs that are far from being optimal for the whole population. Instead, each individual may tend to mutate at rates that selfishly increase its own relative fitness. We s...
متن کاملEmergence of species in evolutionary "simulated annealing".
Which factors govern the evolution of mutation rates and emergence of species? Here, we address this question by using a first principles model of life where population dynamics of asexual organisms is coupled to molecular properties and interactions of proteins encoded in their genomes. Simulating evolution of populations, we found that fitness increases in punctuated steps via epistatic event...
متن کاملThe Mutation Load in Small Populations.
HE mutation load has been defined as the proportion by which the population fitness, or any other attribute of interest, is altered by recurrent mutation (MORTON, CROW, and MULLER 1956; CROW 1958). HALDANE (1937) and MULLER (1950) had earlier shown that this load is largely independent of the harmfulness of the mutant. As long as the selective disadvantage of the mutant is of a larger order of ...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
- Journal of evolutionary biology
دوره 24 8 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2011