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Using colony size to measure fitness in Saccharomyces cerevisiae

James H. Miller, Vincent J. Fasanello, Ping Liu, Emery Longan, Carlos A. Botero, Justin C. Fay

2022PLoS ONE18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Competitive fitness assays in liquid culture have been a mainstay for characterizing experimental evolution of microbial populations. Growth of microbial strains has also been extensively characterized by colony size and could serve as a useful alternative if translated to per generation measurements of relative fitness. To examine fitness based on colony size, we established a relationship between cell number and colony size for strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae robotically pinned onto solid agar plates in a high-density format. This was used to measure growth rates and estimate relative fitness differences between evolved strains and their ancestors. After controlling for edge effects through both normalization and agar-trimming, we found that colony size is a sensitive measure of fitness, capable of detecting 1% differences. While fitnesses determined from liquid and solid mediums were not equivalent, our results demonstrate that colony size provides a sensitive means of measuring fitness that is particularly well suited to measurements across many environments.

Topics & Concepts

BiologySaccharomyces cerevisiaeGenetic FitnessNormalization (sociology)Experimental evolutionMeasure (data warehouse)Evolutionary biologyYeastGeneticsBiological evolutionComputer scienceGeneData miningSociologyAnthropologyEvolution and Genetic DynamicsEvolutionary Game Theory and CooperationPlant and animal studies
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