Laboratory of Fish Genetics, Institute of Animal Physiology and Genetics, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Liběchov, Czech Republic.
Biol Direct. 2011 Mar 3;6:17. doi: 10.1186/1745-6150-6-17.
Quest for understanding the nature of mechanisms governing the life span of clonal organisms lasts for several decades. Phylogenetic evidence for recent origins of most clones is usually interpreted as proof that clones suffer from gradual age-dependent fitness decay (e.g. Muller's ratchet). However, we have shown that a neutral drift can also qualitatively explain the observed distribution of clonal ages. This finding was followed by several attempts to distinguish the effects of neutral and non-neutral processes. Most recently, Neiman et al. 2009 (Ann N Y Acad Sci.:1168:185-200.) reviewed the distribution of asexual lineage ages estimated from a diverse array of taxa and concluded that neutral processes alone may not explain the observed data. Moreover, the authors inferred that similar types of mechanisms determine maximum asexual lineage ages in all asexual taxa. In this paper we review recent methods for distinguishing the effects of neutral and non-neutral processes and point at methodological problems related with them.
We found that contemporary analyses based on phylogenetic data are inadequate to provide any clear-cut answer about the nature and generality of processes affecting evolution of clones. As an alternative approach, we demonstrate that sequence variability in asexual populations is suitable to detect age-dependent selection against clonal lineages. We found that asexual taxa with relatively old clonal lineages are characterised by progressively stronger deviations from neutrality.
Our results demonstrate that some type of age-dependent selection against clones is generally operational in asexual animals, which cover a wide taxonomic range spanning from flatworms to vertebrates. However, we also found a notable difference between the data distribution predicted by available models of sequence evolution and those observed in empirical data. These findings point at the possibility that processes affecting clonal evolution differ from those described in recent studies, suggesting that theoretical models of asexual populations must evolve to address this problem in detail.
This article was reviewed by Isa Schön (nominated by John Logsdon), Arcady Mushegian and Timothy G. Barraclough (nominated by Laurence Hurst).
几十年来,人们一直在探索理解控制克隆生物寿命的机制本质。大多数克隆最近起源的系统发育证据通常被解释为证明克隆体遭受逐渐的与年龄相关的适应度下降(例如 Muller 的棘轮)。然而,我们已经表明,中性漂变也可以定性地解释观察到的克隆年龄分布。这一发现之后,人们尝试了几种方法来区分中性和非中性过程的影响。最近,Neiman 等人在 2009 年发表的文章(《美国国家科学院院刊》:1168:185-200.)回顾了从各种分类群中估计的无性谱系年龄的分布,并得出结论认为,中性过程单独可能无法解释观察到的数据。此外,作者推断,类似的机制决定了所有无性分类群中无性谱系的最大年龄。在本文中,我们回顾了区分中性和非中性过程影响的最新方法,并指出了与这些方法相关的方法学问题。
我们发现,基于系统发育数据的当代分析不足以提供任何关于影响克隆进化的过程的本质和普遍性的明确答案。作为一种替代方法,我们证明无性群体中的序列变异性适合检测与克隆谱系相关的年龄依赖性选择。我们发现,具有相对较老克隆谱系的无性类群具有逐渐偏离中性的特征。
我们的研究结果表明,在无脊椎动物和脊椎动物等广泛的分类范围内,某些类型的与年龄相关的对克隆的选择在无性动物中普遍存在。然而,我们也发现可用序列进化模型预测的数据分布与观察到的实际数据之间存在显著差异。这些发现表明,影响克隆进化的过程可能与最近的研究中描述的过程不同,这表明必须详细研究无性群体的理论模型,以解决这个问题。
这篇文章由 Isa Schön(由 John Logsdon 提名)、Arcady Mushegian 和 Timothy G. Barraclough(由 Laurence Hurst 提名)进行了评审。