Litcius/Paper detail

Adaptive evolution of nontransitive fitness in yeast

Sean W Buskirk, Alecia B Rokes, Gregory I Lang

2020eLife33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

A common misconception is that evolution is a linear 'march of progress', where each organism along a line of descent is more fit than all those that came before it. Rejecting this misconception implies that evolution is nontransitive: a series of adaptive events will, on occasion, produce organisms that are less fit compared to a distant ancestor. Here we identify a nontransitive evolutionary sequence in a 1000-generation yeast evolution experiment. We show that nontransitivity arises due to adaptation in the yeast nuclear genome combined with the stepwise deterioration of an intracellular virus, which provides an advantage over viral competitors within host cells. Extending our analysis, we find that nearly half of our ~140 populations experience multilevel selection, fixing adaptive mutations in both the nuclear and viral genomes. Our results provide a mechanistic case-study for the adaptive evolution of nontransitivity due to multilevel selection in a 1000-generation host/virus evolution experiment.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyExperimental evolutionAdaptation (eye)Adaptive evolutionEvolutionary biologySelection (genetic algorithm)Viral evolutionGenomeComputational biologySequence (biology)Genome evolutionMolecular evolutionPositive selectionGeneticsOrganismYeastHuman evolutionary geneticsBiological evolutionNegative selectionEvolutionary dynamicsModel organismSaccharomyces cerevisiaeTerm (time)GeneEvolution and Genetic DynamicsEvolutionary Game Theory and CooperationRNA and protein synthesis mechanisms