Conrad M
Biosystems. 1979 Aug;11(2-3):167-82. doi: 10.1016/0303-2647(79)90009-1.
Different versions of a gene or of a multigenic system may be essentially equivalent so far as the specific function of the structures which they code for or control is concerned, but very different with respect to their amenability to evolution. The structural features which increase evolutionary amenability are a disadvantage to the organism in terms of energy. Nevertheless, they accumulate in the course of evolution as a consequence of hitchhiking along with the desirable traits whose evolution they make possible. This is the bootstrap principle of evolutionary adaptability. In terms of the adaptive landscape bootstrapping corresponds to populations evolving in such a way that they occupy regions of the landscape which are more amenable to evolutionary hill climbing. The bootstrapping idea has implications for structure-function relations in a number of complex biological information processing systems, including biochemical systems, the immune system, and the brain. Bootstrapping is also discussed in connection with the origin of information processing (the origin of life) and in connection with possible designs for macromolecular computing systems.