Zinser Erik R, Kolter Roberto
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 400 Main Street, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
Res Microbiol. 2004 Jun;155(5):328-36. doi: 10.1016/j.resmic.2004.01.014.
The process of evolution by natural selection has been known for a century and a half, yet the mechanics of selection are still poorly understood. In most cases where natural selection has been studied, the genetic and physiological bases of fitness variation that result in population changes were not identified, leaving only a partial understanding of selection. Starved cultures of the bacterium Escherichia coli present a model system with which to address the genetic and physiological bases of natural selection. This is a model system that also reflects the prevalent state of bacteria in the natural world; due to intense competition for nutrients, microorganisms spend the majority of their lives under starvation conditions. Genetic analyses of a single survivor of starvation identified four adaptive mutations(1). Investigation of these mutations has revealed insights into the molecular and physiological bases of evolution during prolonged starvation stress.
自然选择导致的进化过程已为人所知一个半世纪了,然而选择的机制仍未被充分理解。在大多数对自然选择进行研究的案例中,导致种群变化的适应性变异的遗传和生理基础并未得到确认,对选择的理解也仅停留在部分层面。大肠杆菌的饥饿培养物提供了一个用于研究自然选择的遗传和生理基础的模型系统。这是一个也能反映自然界中细菌普遍状态的模型系统;由于对营养物质的激烈竞争,微生物在大部分生命过程中都处于饥饿状态。对饥饿状态下单一幸存者的基因分析确定了四个适应性突变(1)。对这些突变的研究揭示了长期饥饿压力下进化的分子和生理基础。