Literature DB >> 27862537

Pervasive, yet idiosyncratic, epistatic pleiotropy during adaptation in a behaviourally complex microbe.

P C Zee1, J Liu1, G J Velicer1.   

Abstract

Understanding how multiple mutations interact to jointly impact multiple ecologically important traits is critical for creating a robust picture of organismal fitness and the process of adaptation. However, this is complicated by both environmental heterogeneity and the complexity of genotype-to-phenotype relationships generated by pleiotropy and epistasis. Moreover, little is known about how pleiotropic and epistatic relationships themselves change over evolutionary time. The soil bacterium Myxococcus xanthus employs several distinct social traits across a range of environments. Here, we use an experimental lineage of M. xanthus that evolved a novel form of social motility to address how interactions between epistasis and pleiotropy evolve. Specifically, we test how mutations accumulated during selection on soft agar pleiotropically affect several other social traits (hard agar motility, predation and spore production). Relationships between changes in swarming rate in the selective environment and the four other traits varied greatly over time in both direction and magnitude, both across timescales of the entire evolutionary lineage and individual evolutionary time steps. We also tested how a previously defined epistatic interaction is pleiotropically expressed across these traits. We found that phenotypic effects of this epistatic interaction were highly correlated between soft and hard agar motility, but were uncorrelated between soft agar motility and predation, and inversely correlated between soft agar motility and spore production. Our results show that 'epistatic pleiotropy' varied greatly in magnitude, and often even in sign, across traits and over time, highlighting the necessity of simultaneously considering the interacting complexities of pleiotropy and epistasis when studying the process of adaptation.
© 2016 European Society For Evolutionary Biology. Journal of Evolutionary Biology © 2016 European Society For Evolutionary Biology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  adaptation; epistasis; experimental evolution; pleiotropy; social behaviours

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27862537     DOI: 10.1111/jeb.12999

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Evol Biol        ISSN: 1010-061X            Impact factor:   2.411


  3 in total

1.  Indirect evolution of social fitness inequalities and facultative social exploitation.

Authors:  Ramith R Nair; Francesca Fiegna; Gregory J Velicer
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2018-03-28       Impact factor: 5.349

2.  Hidden paths to endless forms most wonderful: ecology latently shapes evolution of multicellular development in predatory bacteria.

Authors:  Marco La Fortezza; Olaya Rendueles; Heike Keller; Gregory J Velicer
Journal:  Commun Biol       Date:  2022-09-16

3.  Transcriptional changes when Myxococcus xanthus preys on Escherichia coli suggest myxobacterial predators are constitutively toxic but regulate their feeding.

Authors:  Paul G Livingstone; Andrew D Millard; Martin T Swain; David E Whitworth
Journal:  Microb Genom       Date:  2018-01-18
  3 in total

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