Cao Huansheng, Butler Kevin, Hossain Mithi, Lewis James D
Louis Calder Center-Biological Field Station and Department of Biological Sciences, Fordham University, Armonk, New York, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Aug 14;9(8):e105369. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0105369. eCollection 2014.
The fitness effects of mutations are context specific and depend on both external (e.g., environment) and internal (e.g., cellular stress, genetic background) factors. The influence of population size and density on fitness effects are unknown, despite the central role population size plays in the supply and fixation of mutations. We addressed this issue by comparing the fitness of 92 Keio strains (Escherichia coli K12 single gene knockouts) at comparatively high (1.2×10(7) CFUs/mL) and low (2.5×10(2) CFUs/mL) densities, which also differed in population size (high: 1.2×10(8); low: 1.25×10(3)). Twenty-eight gene deletions (30%) exhibited a fitness difference, ranging from 5 to 174% (median: 35%), between the high and low densities. Our analyses suggest this variation among gene deletions in fitness responses reflected in part both gene orientation and function, of the gene properties we examined (genomic position, length, orientation, and function). Although we could not determine the relative effects of population density and size, our results suggest fitness effects of mutations vary with these two factors, and this variation is gene-specific. Besides being a mechanism for density-dependent selection (r-K selection), the dependence of fitness effects on population density and size has implications for any population that varies in size over time, including populations undergoing evolutionary rescue, species invasions into novel habitats, and cancer progression and metastasis. Further, combined with recent advances in understanding the roles of other context-specific factors in the fitness effects of mutations, our results will help address theoretical and applied biological questions more realistically.
突变的适应性效应具有背景特异性,取决于外部因素(如环境)和内部因素(如细胞应激、遗传背景)。尽管种群大小在突变的供应和固定中起着核心作用,但种群大小和密度对适应性效应的影响尚不清楚。我们通过比较92种Keio菌株(大肠杆菌K12单基因敲除株)在相对较高密度(1.2×10⁷CFUs/mL)和低密度(2.5×10²CFUs/mL)下的适应性来解决这个问题,这两种密度下的种群大小也不同(高:1.2×10⁸;低:1.25×10³)。28个基因缺失(30%)在高密度和低密度之间表现出5%至174%(中位数:35%)的适应性差异。我们的分析表明,基因缺失在适应性反应中的这种变化部分反映了我们所研究的基因特性(基因组位置、长度、方向和功能)中的基因方向和功能。虽然我们无法确定种群密度和大小的相对影响,但我们的结果表明,突变的适应性效应随这两个因素而变化,并且这种变化是基因特异性的。适应性效应不仅是密度依赖选择(r-K选择)的一种机制,其对种群密度和大小的依赖性对于任何随时间变化大小的种群都有影响,包括经历进化拯救的种群、入侵新栖息地的物种以及癌症的进展和转移。此外,结合最近在理解其他背景特异性因素在突变适应性效应中的作用方面的进展,我们的结果将有助于更现实地解决理论和应用生物学问题。