| Literature DB >> 23737744 |
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23737744 PMCID: PMC3667783 DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1003340
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Pathog ISSN: 1553-7366 Impact factor: 6.823
Figure 1Some of the pathogenic characteristics explored by laboratory passage models.
Examples of the application of experimental evolution to the study of pathogens include modeling the evolution of drug resistance [18]–[20], trade-offs between generalist versus specialist adaptations to the host [9], [12], pathogen transmission [13], [14], and biofilm formation [17].
Considerations in designing a laboratory passage experiment.
| Consideration | Why it matters |
| Population size | Too small and genetic drift can result in mutations that reduce overall fitness. |
| Mutation rate | Too high (through the use of mutagens) and the number of background hitchhiker mutations make linking phenotype to genotype more difficult. |
| Choosing isolates to sequence | The existence of complex population dynamics, such as clonal interference, means that individual clones from individual time-points represent only a snapshot. Sequencing intermediates and measuring allelic frequencies in the evolving population may give a more complete picture of evolutionary trajectories. |
| When to stop | Fitness of a population, in general, increases at a greater rate per generation early during passage, though open-ended experiments continue to lead to surprising results decades after they began. |