Literature DB >> 31479539

Phenotypic variability can promote the evolution of adaptive plasticity by reducing the stringency of natural selection.

Jeremy Draghi1,2,3.   

Abstract

Adaptive phenotypic plasticity is a potent but not ubiquitous solution to environmental heterogeneity, driving interest in what factors promote and limit its evolution. Here, a novel computational model representing stochastic information flow in development is used to explore evolution from a constitutive phenotype to an adaptively plastic response. Results show that populations tend to evolve robustness to developmental stochasticity, but that this evolved robustness limits evolvability; specifically, robust genotypes have less ability to evolve adaptive plasticity when presented with a mix of both the ancestral environment and a new environment. Analytic calculations and computational experiments confirm that this constraint occurs when the initial mutational steps towards plasticity are pleiotropic, such that mutant fitnesses decline in the environment to which their parents are well-adapted. Greater phenotypic variability improves evolvability in the model by lessening this decline as well as by improving the fitness of partial adaptations to the new environment. By making initial plastic mutations more palatable to natural selection, phenotypic variability can increase the evolvability of an innovative, plastic response without improving evolvability to simpler challenges such as a shifted optimum in a single environment. Populations that evolved robustness by negative feedback between the trait and its rate of change show a particularly strong constraining effect on the evolvability of plasticity, revealing another mechanism by which evolutionary history can limit later innovation. These results document a novel mechanism by which weakening selection could actually stimulate the evolution of a major innovation.
© 2019 European Society For Evolutionary Biology. Journal of Evolutionary Biology © 2019 European Society For Evolutionary Biology.

Keywords:  constraint; developmental noise; evolvability; phenotypic plasticity

Year:  2019        PMID: 31479539     DOI: 10.1111/jeb.13527

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


  1 in total

Review 1.  Predictability of Biotic Stress Structures Plant Defence Evolution.

Authors:  Daan Mertens; Karina Boege; André Kessler; Julia Koricheva; Jennifer S Thaler; Noah K Whiteman; Erik H Poelman
Journal:  Trends Ecol Evol       Date:  2021-01-16       Impact factor: 17.712

  1 in total

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