Bollback Jonathan P, Huelsenbeck John P
Institute of Biology, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Mol Biol Evol. 2007 Jun;24(6):1397-406. doi: 10.1093/molbev/msm056. Epub 2007 Mar 22.
When a beneficial mutation is fixed in a population that lacks recombination, the genetic background linked to that mutation is fixed. As a result, beneficial mutations on different backgrounds experience competition, or "clonal interference," that can cause asexual populations to evolve more slowly than their sexual counterparts. Factors such as a large population size (N) and high mutation rates (mu) increase the number of competing beneficial mutations, and hence are expected to increase the intensity of clonal interference. However, recent theory suggests that, with very large values of Nmu, the severity of clonal interference may instead decline. The reason is that, with large Nmu, genomes including both beneficial mutations are rapidly created by recurrent mutation, obviating the need for recombination. Here, we analyze data from experimentally evolved asexual populations of a bacteriophage and find that, in these nonrecombining populations with very large Nmu, recurrent mutation does appear to ameliorate this cost of asexuality.
当一个有益突变在缺乏重组的种群中固定下来时,与该突变相关的遗传背景也会随之固定。因此,不同背景下的有益突变会相互竞争,即“克隆干扰”,这会导致无性繁殖种群的进化速度比有性繁殖种群更慢。诸如大种群规模(N)和高突变率(μ)等因素会增加竞争性有益突变的数量,因此预计会增强克隆干扰的强度。然而,最近的理论表明,当Nμ的值非常大时,克隆干扰的严重程度反而可能下降。原因是,在Nμ值很大的情况下,通过反复突变会迅速产生包含两个有益突变的基因组,从而无需重组。在此,我们分析了来自实验进化的噬菌体无性繁殖种群的数据,发现,在这些具有非常大的Nμ值的非重组种群中,反复突变似乎确实减轻了无性繁殖的这种代价。