Ancel L W, Fontana W
Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford University, California 94305, USA.
J Exp Zool. 2000 Oct 15;288(3):242-83. doi: 10.1002/1097-010x(20001015)288:3<242::aid-jez5>3.0.co;2-o.
RNA folding from sequences into secondary structures is a simple yet powerful, biophysically grounded model of a genotype-phenotype map in which concepts like plasticity, evolvability, epistasis, and modularity can not only be precisely defined and statistically measured but also reveal simultaneous and profoundly non-independent effects of natural selection. Molecular plasticity is viewed here as the capacity of an RNA sequence to assume a variety of energetically favorable shapes by equilibrating among them at constant temperature. Through simulations based on experimental designs, we study the dynamics of a population of RNA molecules that evolve toward a predefined target shape in a constant environment. Each shape in the plastic repertoire of a sequence contributes to the overall fitness of the sequence in proportion to the time the sequence spends in that shape. Plasticity is costly, since the more shapes a sequence can assume, the less time it spends in any one of them. Unsurprisingly, selection leads to a reduction of plasticity (environmental canalization). The most striking observation, however, is the simultaneous slow-down and eventual halting of the evolutionary process. The reduction of plasticity entails genetic canalization, that is, a dramatic loss of variability (and hence a loss of evolvability) to the point of lock-in. The causal bridge between environmental canalization and genetic canalization is provided by a correlation between the set of shapes in the plastic repertoire of a sequence and the set of dominant (minimum free energy) shapes in its genetic neighborhood. This statistical property of the RNA genotype-phenotype map, which we call plastogenetic congruence, traps populations in regions where most genetic variation is phenotypically neutral. We call this phenomenon neutral confinement. Analytical models of neutral confinement, made tractable by the assumption of perfect plastogenetic congruence, formally connect mutation rate, the topography of phenotype space, and evolvability. These models identify three mutational regimes: that corresponding to neutral confinement, an exploration threshold corresponding to a breakdown of neutral confinement with the simultaneous persistence of the dominant phenotype, and a classic error threshold corresponding to the loss of the dominant phenotype. In a final step, we analyze the structural properties of canalized phenotypes. The reduction of plasticity leads to extreme modularity, which we analyze from several perspectives: thermophysical (melting--the RNA version of a norm of reaction), kinetic (folding pathways--the RNA version of development), and genetic (transposability--the insensitivity to genetic context). The model thereby suggests a possible evolutionary origin of modularity as a side effect of environmental canalization.
RNA从序列折叠成二级结构是一种简单却强大的、基于生物物理学的基因型-表型图谱模型,在该模型中,诸如可塑性、可进化性、上位性和模块化等概念不仅可以被精确界定和进行统计学测量,而且还能揭示自然选择的同步且深刻的非独立效应。在这里,分子可塑性被视为RNA序列在恒定温度下通过在多种能量有利的形状之间达到平衡来呈现多种形状的能力。通过基于实验设计的模拟,我们研究了在恒定环境中朝着预定义目标形状进化的RNA分子群体的动力学。序列可塑性库中的每种形状对序列总体适应性的贡献与其在该形状中所花费的时间成正比。可塑性是有代价的,因为一个序列能够呈现的形状越多,它在任何一种形状上花费的时间就越少。不出所料,选择导致可塑性降低(环境定向化)。然而,最引人注目的观察结果是进化过程同时放缓并最终停止。可塑性的降低导致遗传定向化,也就是说,变异性急剧丧失(从而进化能力丧失),直至锁定状态。环境定向化和遗传定向化之间的因果桥梁由序列可塑性库中的形状集与其遗传邻域中的优势(最小自由能)形状集之间的相关性提供。我们将RNA基因型-表型图谱的这种统计特性称为塑性遗传一致性,它将群体困在大多数遗传变异在表型上呈中性的区域。我们将这种现象称为中性限制。通过假设完美的塑性遗传一致性而变得易于处理的中性限制分析模型,正式地将突变率、表型空间的地形和可进化性联系起来。这些模型确定了三种突变状态:对应于中性限制的状态、对应于中性限制瓦解且优势表型同时持续存在的探索阈值状态,以及对应于优势表型丧失的经典错误阈值状态。在最后一步中,我们分析了定向化表型的结构特性。可塑性的降低导致了极端模块化,我们从几个角度对其进行了分析:热物理学角度(熔解——反应规范的RNA版本)、动力学角度(折叠途径——发育的RNA版本)和遗传学角度(转座性——对遗传背景的不敏感性)。该模型由此暗示了模块化作为环境定向化副作用的一种可能进化起源。