Horizontal gene transfer dynamics and distribution of fitness effects during microbial <it>in silico </it>evolution

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) is a process that facilitates the transfer of genetic material between organisms that are not directly related, and thus can affect both the rate of evolution and emergence of traits. Recent phylogeneti...

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Main Authors: Mozhayskiy Vadim, Tagkopoulos Ilias
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2012-06-01
Series:BMC Bioinformatics
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spelling doaj-5c39653de37b462e87e3b7a0d24e5c5f2020-11-25T01:55:02ZengBMCBMC Bioinformatics1471-21052012-06-0113Suppl 10S1310.1186/1471-2105-13-S10-S13Horizontal gene transfer dynamics and distribution of fitness effects during microbial <it>in silico </it>evolutionMozhayskiy VadimTagkopoulos Ilias<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) is a process that facilitates the transfer of genetic material between organisms that are not directly related, and thus can affect both the rate of evolution and emergence of traits. Recent phylogenetic studies reveal HGT events are likely ubiquitous in the Tree of Life. However, our knowledge of HGT's role in evolution and biological organization is very limited, mainly due to the lack of ancestral evolutionary signatures and the difficulty to observe complex evolutionary dynamics in a laboratory setting. Here, we utilize a multi-scale microbial evolution model to comprehensively study the effect of HGT on the evolution of complex traits and organization of gene regulatory networks.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Large-scale simulations reveal a distinct signature of the Distribution of Fitness Effect (DFE) for HGT events: during evolution, while mutation fitness effects become more negative and neutral, HGT events result in a balanced effect distribution. In either case, lethal events are significantly decreased during evolution (33.0% to 3.2%), a clear indication of mutational robustness. Interestingly, evolution was accelerated when populations were exposed to correlated environments of increasing complexity, especially in the presence of HGT, a phenomenon that warrants further investigation. High HGT rates were found to be disruptive, while the average transferred fragment size was linked to functional module size in the underlying biological network. Network analysis reveals that HGT results in larger regulatory networks, but with the same sparsity level as those evolved in its absence. Observed phenotypic variability and co-existing solutions were traced to individual gain/loss of function events, while subsequent re-wiring after fragment integration was necessary for complex traits to emerge.</p>
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mozhayskiy Vadim
Tagkopoulos Ilias
spellingShingle Mozhayskiy Vadim
Tagkopoulos Ilias
Horizontal gene transfer dynamics and distribution of fitness effects during microbial <it>in silico </it>evolution
BMC Bioinformatics
author_facet Mozhayskiy Vadim
Tagkopoulos Ilias
author_sort Mozhayskiy Vadim
title Horizontal gene transfer dynamics and distribution of fitness effects during microbial <it>in silico </it>evolution
title_short Horizontal gene transfer dynamics and distribution of fitness effects during microbial <it>in silico </it>evolution
title_full Horizontal gene transfer dynamics and distribution of fitness effects during microbial <it>in silico </it>evolution
title_fullStr Horizontal gene transfer dynamics and distribution of fitness effects during microbial <it>in silico </it>evolution
title_full_unstemmed Horizontal gene transfer dynamics and distribution of fitness effects during microbial <it>in silico </it>evolution
title_sort horizontal gene transfer dynamics and distribution of fitness effects during microbial <it>in silico </it>evolution
publisher BMC
series BMC Bioinformatics
issn 1471-2105
publishDate 2012-06-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) is a process that facilitates the transfer of genetic material between organisms that are not directly related, and thus can affect both the rate of evolution and emergence of traits. Recent phylogenetic studies reveal HGT events are likely ubiquitous in the Tree of Life. However, our knowledge of HGT's role in evolution and biological organization is very limited, mainly due to the lack of ancestral evolutionary signatures and the difficulty to observe complex evolutionary dynamics in a laboratory setting. Here, we utilize a multi-scale microbial evolution model to comprehensively study the effect of HGT on the evolution of complex traits and organization of gene regulatory networks.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Large-scale simulations reveal a distinct signature of the Distribution of Fitness Effect (DFE) for HGT events: during evolution, while mutation fitness effects become more negative and neutral, HGT events result in a balanced effect distribution. In either case, lethal events are significantly decreased during evolution (33.0% to 3.2%), a clear indication of mutational robustness. Interestingly, evolution was accelerated when populations were exposed to correlated environments of increasing complexity, especially in the presence of HGT, a phenomenon that warrants further investigation. High HGT rates were found to be disruptive, while the average transferred fragment size was linked to functional module size in the underlying biological network. Network analysis reveals that HGT results in larger regulatory networks, but with the same sparsity level as those evolved in its absence. Observed phenotypic variability and co-existing solutions were traced to individual gain/loss of function events, while subsequent re-wiring after fragment integration was necessary for complex traits to emerge.</p>
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AT tagkopoulosilias horizontalgenetransferdynamicsanddistributionoffitnesseffectsduringmicrobialitinsilicoitevolution
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