Data from: Mutation rate dynamics in a bacterial population reflect tension between adaptation and genetic load
Mutations are the ultimate source of heritable variation for evolution. Understanding how mutation rates themselves evolve is thus essential for quantitatively understanding many evolutionary processes. According to theory, mutation rates should be minimized for well-adapted populations living in st...
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Zusammenfassung: | Mutations are the ultimate source of heritable variation for evolution.
Understanding how mutation rates themselves evolve is thus essential for
quantitatively understanding many evolutionary processes. According to
theory, mutation rates should be minimized for well-adapted populations
living in stable environments, whereas hypermutators may evolve if
conditions change. However, the long-term fate of hypermutators is
unknown. Using a phylogenomic approach, we found that an adapting
Escherichia coli population that first evolved a mutT hypermutator
phenotype was later invaded by two independent lineages with mutY
mutations that reduced genome-wide mutation rates. Applying neutral theory
to synonymous substitutions, we dated the emergence of these mutations and
inferred that the mutT mutation increased the point-mutation rate by
~150-fold, while the mutY mutations reduced the rate by ~40-60%, with a
corresponding decrease in the genetic load. Thus, the long-term fate of
the hypermutators was governed by the selective advantage arising from a
reduced mutation rate as the potential for further adaptation declined. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.hb3b5 |