An interplay of resource availability, population size and mutation rate potentiates the evolution of metabolic signaling

Abstract Background Asexually reproducing populations of single cells evolve through mutation, natural selection, and genetic drift. Environmental conditions in which the evolution takes place define the emergent fitness landscapes. In this work, we used Avida—a digital evolution framework—to uncove...

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Main Authors: Bhaskar Kumawat, Ramray Bhat
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-04-01
Series:BMC Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12862-021-01782-0
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spelling doaj-77232f85ce7144e69a759c85900cd16a2021-08-29T11:06:05ZengBMCBMC Ecology and Evolution2730-71822021-04-0121111510.1186/s12862-021-01782-0An interplay of resource availability, population size and mutation rate potentiates the evolution of metabolic signalingBhaskar Kumawat0Ramray Bhat1Department of Molecular Reproduction, Development and Genetics, Indian Institute of ScienceDepartment of Molecular Reproduction, Development and Genetics, Indian Institute of ScienceAbstract Background Asexually reproducing populations of single cells evolve through mutation, natural selection, and genetic drift. Environmental conditions in which the evolution takes place define the emergent fitness landscapes. In this work, we used Avida—a digital evolution framework—to uncover a hitherto unexplored interaction between mutation rates, population size, and the relative abundance of metabolizable resources, and its effect on evolutionary outcomes in small populations of digital organisms. Results Over each simulation, the population evolved to one of several states, each associated with a single dominant phenotype with its associated fitness and genotype. For a low mutation rate, acquisition of fitness by organisms was accompanied with, and dependent on, an increase in rate of genomic replication. At an increased mutation rate, phenotypes with high fitness values were similarly achieved through enhanced genome replication rates. In addition, we also observed the frequent emergence of suboptimal fitness phenotype, wherein neighboring organisms signaled to each other information relevant to performing metabolic tasks. This metabolic signaling was vital to fitness acquisition and was correlated with greater genotypic and phenotypic heterogeneity in the population. The frequency of appearance of signaling populations increased with population size and with resource abundance. Conclusions Our results reveal a minimal set of environment–genotype interactions that lead to the emergence of metabolic signaling within evolving populations.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12862-021-01782-0EvolutionSignalingArtificial lifeTumorigenesisDevelopment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bhaskar Kumawat
Ramray Bhat
spellingShingle Bhaskar Kumawat
Ramray Bhat
An interplay of resource availability, population size and mutation rate potentiates the evolution of metabolic signaling
BMC Ecology and Evolution
Evolution
Signaling
Artificial life
Tumorigenesis
Development
author_facet Bhaskar Kumawat
Ramray Bhat
author_sort Bhaskar Kumawat
title An interplay of resource availability, population size and mutation rate potentiates the evolution of metabolic signaling
title_short An interplay of resource availability, population size and mutation rate potentiates the evolution of metabolic signaling
title_full An interplay of resource availability, population size and mutation rate potentiates the evolution of metabolic signaling
title_fullStr An interplay of resource availability, population size and mutation rate potentiates the evolution of metabolic signaling
title_full_unstemmed An interplay of resource availability, population size and mutation rate potentiates the evolution of metabolic signaling
title_sort interplay of resource availability, population size and mutation rate potentiates the evolution of metabolic signaling
publisher BMC
series BMC Ecology and Evolution
issn 2730-7182
publishDate 2021-04-01
description Abstract Background Asexually reproducing populations of single cells evolve through mutation, natural selection, and genetic drift. Environmental conditions in which the evolution takes place define the emergent fitness landscapes. In this work, we used Avida—a digital evolution framework—to uncover a hitherto unexplored interaction between mutation rates, population size, and the relative abundance of metabolizable resources, and its effect on evolutionary outcomes in small populations of digital organisms. Results Over each simulation, the population evolved to one of several states, each associated with a single dominant phenotype with its associated fitness and genotype. For a low mutation rate, acquisition of fitness by organisms was accompanied with, and dependent on, an increase in rate of genomic replication. At an increased mutation rate, phenotypes with high fitness values were similarly achieved through enhanced genome replication rates. In addition, we also observed the frequent emergence of suboptimal fitness phenotype, wherein neighboring organisms signaled to each other information relevant to performing metabolic tasks. This metabolic signaling was vital to fitness acquisition and was correlated with greater genotypic and phenotypic heterogeneity in the population. The frequency of appearance of signaling populations increased with population size and with resource abundance. Conclusions Our results reveal a minimal set of environment–genotype interactions that lead to the emergence of metabolic signaling within evolving populations.
topic Evolution
Signaling
Artificial life
Tumorigenesis
Development
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12862-021-01782-0
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