Haygood Ralph
Biology Department, Duke University, NC, USA.
Mol Biol Evol. 2006 May;23(5):957-63. doi: 10.1093/molbev/msj104. Epub 2006 Feb 9.
Two recent theoretical studies of adaptation suggest that more complex organisms tend to adapt more slowly. Specifically, in Fisher's "geometric" model of a finite population where multiple traits are under optimizing selection, the average progress ensuing from a single mutation decreases as the number of traits increases--the "cost of complexity." Here, I draw on molecular and histological data to assess the extent to which on a large phylogenetic scale, this predicted decrease in the rate of adaptation per mutation is mitigated by an increase in the number of mutations per generation as complexity increases. As an index of complexity for multicellular organisms, I use the number of visibly distinct types of cell in the body. Mutation rate is the product of mutational target size and population mutation rate per unit target. Despite much scatter, genome size appears to be positively correlated with complexity (as indexed by cell-type number), which along with other considerations suggests that mutational target size tends to increase with complexity. In contrast, effective population mutation rate per unit target appears to be negatively correlated with complexity. The net result is that mutation rate probably does tend to increase with complexity, although probably not fast enough to eliminate the cost of complexity.
最近两项关于适应性的理论研究表明,更复杂的生物体往往适应得更慢。具体而言,在费希尔的有限种群“几何”模型中,多个性状处于优化选择之下,单个突变产生的平均进展会随着性状数量的增加而减少——即“复杂性成本”。在此,我利用分子和组织学数据来评估,在多大程度上,从大的系统发育尺度来看,随着复杂性增加,每代突变数量的增加是否会缓解这种预测的每个突变适应性速率的下降。对于多细胞生物体,我用体内明显不同类型细胞的数量作为复杂性指标。突变率是突变目标大小与每单位目标的群体突变率的乘积。尽管存在很多离散性,但基因组大小似乎与复杂性(以细胞类型数量为指标)呈正相关,这与其他因素一起表明突变目标大小往往会随着复杂性增加。相反,每单位目标的有效群体突变率似乎与复杂性呈负相关。最终结果是,突变率可能确实会随着复杂性增加,尽管可能增速不够快,无法消除复杂性成本。