Nonlinear effects in evolution – an ab initio study: A model in which the classical theory of evolution occurs as a special case
An ab initio approach was used to study the molecular-level interactions that connect gene-mutation to changes in an organism׳s phenotype. The study provides new insights into the evolutionary process and presents a simplification whereby changes in phenotypic properties may be studied in terms of t...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of theoretical biology 2016-07, Vol.401, p.94-108 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | An ab initio approach was used to study the molecular-level interactions that connect gene-mutation to changes in an organism׳s phenotype. The study provides new insights into the evolutionary process and presents a simplification whereby changes in phenotypic properties may be studied in terms of the binding affinities of the chemical interactions affected by mutation, rather than by correlation to the genes. The study also reports the role that nonlinear effects play in the progression of organs, and how those effects relate to the classical theory of evolution. Results indicate that the classical theory of evolution occurs as a special case within the ab initio model – a case having two attributes. The first attribute: proteins and promoter regions are not shared among organs. The second attribute: continuous limiting behavior exists in the physical properties of organs as well as in the binding affinity of the associated chemical interactions, with respect to displacements in the chemical properties of proteins and promoter regions induced by mutation. Outside of the special case, second-order coupling contributions are significant and nonlinear effects play an important role, a result corroborated by analyses of published activity levels in binding and transactivation assays. Further, gradations in the state of perfection of an organ may be small or large depending on the type of mutation, and not necessarily closely-separated as maintained by the classical theory. Results also indicate that organs progress with varying degrees of interdependence, the likelihood of successful mutation decreases with increasing complexity of the affected chemical system, and differences between the ab initio model and the classical theory increase with increasing complexity of the organism.
•Changes in phenotypic properties may be studied in terms of binding affinity.•Nonlinear and linear contributions are equally significant.•Organs progress with varying degrees of interdependence.•Likelihood of successful mutation decreases with increasing chemical complexity.•The model and classical theory diverge with increasing complexity of the organism. |
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ISSN: | 0022-5193 1095-8541 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jtbi.2016.03.026 |