Litcius/Paper detail

The evolutionary plasticity of chromosome metabolism allows adaptation to constitutive DNA replication stress

Marco Fumasoni, Andrew W. Murray

2020eLife42 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Many biological features are conserved and thus considered to be resistant to evolutionary change. While rapid genetic adaptation following the removal of conserved genes has been observed, we often lack a mechanistic understanding of how adaptation happens. We used the budding yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, to investigate the evolutionary plasticity of chromosome metabolism, a network of evolutionary conserved modules. We experimentally evolved cells constitutively experiencing DNA replication stress caused by the absence of Ctf4, a protein that coordinates the enzymatic activities at replication forks. Parallel populations adapted to replication stress, over 1000 generations, by acquiring multiple, concerted mutations. These mutations altered conserved features of two chromosome metabolism modules, DNA replication and sister chromatid cohesion, and inactivated a third, the DNA damage checkpoint. The selected mutations define a functionally reproducible evolutionary trajectory. We suggest that the evolutionary plasticity of chromosome metabolism has implications for genome evolution in natural populations and cancer.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyGeneticsEstablishment of sister chromatid cohesionDNA replicationDNA re-replicationControl of chromosome duplicationHuman evolutionary geneticsEukaryotic DNA replicationGenomeGeneChromosome segregationEvolutionary biologyChromosomeDNA Repair MechanismsMicrotubule and mitosis dynamicsFungal and yeast genetics research