Literature DB >> 28812623

A thousand empirical adaptive landscapes and their navigability.

José Aguilar-Rodríguez1,2, Joshua L Payne1,2, Andreas Wagner1,2,3.   

Abstract

The adaptive landscape is an iconic metaphor that pervades evolutionary biology. It was mostly applied in theoretical models until recent years, when empirical data began to allow partial landscape reconstructions. Here, we exhaustively analyse 1,137 complete landscapes from 129 eukaryotic species, each describing the binding affinity of a transcription factor to all possible short DNA sequences. We find that the navigability of these landscapes through single mutations is intermediate to that of additive and shuffled null models, suggesting that binding affinity-and thereby gene expression-is readily fine-tuned via mutations in transcription factor binding sites. The landscapes have few peaks that vary in their accessibility and in the number of sequences they contain. Binding sites in the mouse genome are enriched in sequences found in the peaks of especially navigable landscapes and the genetic diversity of binding sites in yeast increases with the number of sequences in a peak. Our findings suggest that landscape navigability may have contributed to the enormous success of transcriptional regulation as a source of evolutionary adaptations and innovations.

Entities:  

Year:  2017        PMID: 28812623     DOI: 10.1038/s41559-016-0045

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nat Ecol Evol        ISSN: 2397-334X            Impact factor:   15.460


  27 in total

1.  Long-term evolution on complex fitness landscapes when mutation is weak.

Authors:  David M McCandlish
Journal:  Heredity (Edinb)       Date:  2018-09-19       Impact factor: 3.821

2.  Quantum aspects of evolution: a contribution towards evolutionary explorations of genotype networks via quantum walks.

Authors:  Diego Santiago-Alarcon; Horacio Tapia-McClung; Sergio Lerma-Hernández; Salvador E Venegas-Andraca
Journal:  J R Soc Interface       Date:  2020-11-11       Impact factor: 4.118

3.  Information theory, evolutionary innovations and evolvability.

Authors:  Andreas Wagner
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2017-12-05       Impact factor: 6.237

4.  Unbiased inference of the fitness landscape ruggedness from imprecise fitness estimates.

Authors:  Siliang Song; Jianzhi Zhang
Journal:  Evolution       Date:  2021-10-07       Impact factor: 3.694

5.  Relation Between the Number of Peaks and the Number of Reciprocal Sign Epistatic Interactions.

Authors:  Raimundo Saona; Fyodor A Kondrashov; Ksenia A Khudiakova
Journal:  Bull Math Biol       Date:  2022-06-17       Impact factor: 3.871

Review 6.  The causes of evolvability and their evolution.

Authors:  Joshua L Payne; Andreas Wagner
Journal:  Nat Rev Genet       Date:  2019-01       Impact factor: 53.242

7.  Experimental Resurrection of Ancestral Mammalian CPEB3 Ribozymes Reveals Deep Functional Conservation.

Authors:  Devin P Bendixsen; Tanner B Pollock; Gianluca Peri; Eric J Hayden
Journal:  Mol Biol Evol       Date:  2021-06-25       Impact factor: 16.240

8.  Why Phenotype Robustness Promotes Phenotype Evolvability.

Authors:  Xinzhu Wei; Jianzhi Zhang
Journal:  Genome Biol Evol       Date:  2017-12-01       Impact factor: 3.416

Review 9.  The topology of evolutionary novelty and innovation in macroevolution.

Authors:  Douglas H Erwin
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2017-12-05       Impact factor: 6.237

10.  RNA-mediated gene regulation is less evolvable than transcriptional regulation.

Authors:  Joshua L Payne; Fahad Khalid; Andreas Wagner
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2018-03-26       Impact factor: 11.205

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