Department of Molecular Biosciences, The University of Texas at Austin; BEACON Center for the Study of Evolution in Action, Michigan State University;
BEACON Center for the Study of Evolution in Action, Michigan State University; Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Michigan State University;
J Vis Exp. 2023 Aug 18(198). doi: 10.3791/65342.
The Long-Term Evolution Experiment (LTEE) has followed twelve populations of Escherichia coli as they have adapted to a simple laboratory environment for more than 35 years and 77,000 bacterial generations. The setup and procedures used in the LTEE epitomize reliable and reproducible methods for studying microbial evolution. In this protocol, we first describe how the LTEE populations are transferred to fresh medium and cultured each day. Then, we describe how the LTEE populations are regularly checked for possible signs of contamination and archived to provide a permanent frozen "fossil record" for later study. Multiple safeguards included in these procedures are designed to prevent contamination, detect various problems when they occur, and recover from disruptions without appreciably setting back the progress of the experiment. One way that the overall tempo and character of evolutionary changes are monitored in the LTEE is by measuring the competitive fitness of populations and strains from the experiment. We describe how co-culture competition assays are conducted and provide both a spreadsheet and an R package (fitnessR) for calculating relative fitness from the results. Over the course of the LTEE, the behaviors of some populations have changed in interesting ways, and new technologies like whole-genome sequencing have provided additional avenues for investigating how the populations have evolved. We end by discussing how the original LTEE procedures have been updated to accommodate or take advantage of these changes. This protocol will be useful for researchers who use the LTEE as a model system for studying connections between evolution and genetics, molecular biology, systems biology, and ecology. More broadly, the LTEE provides a tried-and-true template for those who are beginning their own evolution experiments with new microbes, environments, and questions.
长期进化实验(LTEE)已经对 12 个大肠杆菌种群进行了跟踪研究,这些种群在一个简单的实验室环境中适应了 35 多年和 77000 代细菌。LTEE 中使用的设置和程序是研究微生物进化的可靠和可重复的方法的典范。在本方案中,我们首先描述了如何将 LTEE 种群转移到新鲜培养基中并每天培养。然后,我们描述了如何定期检查 LTEE 种群是否存在污染的迹象,并将其存档,为以后的研究提供永久的冷冻“化石记录”。这些程序中包含的多种保护措施旨在防止污染,检测到发生的各种问题,并从干扰中恢复而不会明显延迟实验的进展。监测 LTEE 中进化变化的总体速度和特征的一种方法是测量实验中种群和菌株的竞争适应性。我们描述了如何进行共培养竞争测定,并提供了一个电子表格和一个 R 包(fitnessR),用于根据结果计算相对适应性。在 LTEE 的过程中,一些种群的行为以有趣的方式发生了变化,而像全基因组测序这样的新技术为研究种群如何进化提供了更多的途径。最后,我们讨论了如何更新原始的 LTEE 程序以适应或利用这些变化。对于将 LTEE 用作研究进化与遗传学、分子生物学、系统生物学和生态学之间联系的模型系统的研究人员来说,本方案将非常有用。更广泛地说,LTEE 为那些使用新微生物、环境和问题开始自己的进化实验的人提供了一个经过验证的模板。