The fitness effects of mutations can depend on the genetic backgrounds in which they occur and thereby influence future opportunities for evolving populations. In particular, mutations that fix in a population might change the selective benefit of subsequent mutations, giving rise to historical contingency. We examine these effects by focusing on mutations in a key metabolic gene, pykF, that arose independently early in the history of 12 Escherichia coli populations during a long-term evolution experiment. Eight different evolved nonsynonymous mutations conferred similar fitness benefits of ∼10% when transferred into the ancestor, and these benefits were greater than the one conferred by a deletion mutation. In contrast, the same mutations ...
Colony counts of competitions measuring the effect of pykF mutations in the ancestral strain (REL606...
Newly arising mutations create genetic variation which natural selection can act on to favor organis...
Beneficial mutations are intuitively relevant to understanding adaptation [1-3], yet not all benefic...
The fitness effects of mutations can depend on the genetic backgrounds in which they occur and there...
Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution. T...
Resolving the relationship between genotypic and their effects remains a central challenge in the st...
Beneficial mutations fuel adaptation by altering phenotypes that enhance the fit of organisms to the...
BGPI : équipe 2International audienceBeneficial mutations fuel adaptation by altering phenotypes tha...
Mutations that improve fitness in one environment can often be beneficial, deleterious, or neutral i...
The effect of a mutation depends on its interaction with the genetic background in which it is asses...
Understanding the extreme variation among bacterial genomes remains an unsolved challenge in evoluti...
Mutations are the ultimate source of heritable variation for evolution. Understanding how mutation r...
Long term evolution experiments have tested the importance of genetic and environmental factors in i...
International audienceMutations are the ultimate source of heritable variation for evolution. Unders...
Parallel and convergent evolution have been remarkably common observations in molecular adaptation b...
Colony counts of competitions measuring the effect of pykF mutations in the ancestral strain (REL606...
Newly arising mutations create genetic variation which natural selection can act on to favor organis...
Beneficial mutations are intuitively relevant to understanding adaptation [1-3], yet not all benefic...
The fitness effects of mutations can depend on the genetic backgrounds in which they occur and there...
Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution. T...
Resolving the relationship between genotypic and their effects remains a central challenge in the st...
Beneficial mutations fuel adaptation by altering phenotypes that enhance the fit of organisms to the...
BGPI : équipe 2International audienceBeneficial mutations fuel adaptation by altering phenotypes tha...
Mutations that improve fitness in one environment can often be beneficial, deleterious, or neutral i...
The effect of a mutation depends on its interaction with the genetic background in which it is asses...
Understanding the extreme variation among bacterial genomes remains an unsolved challenge in evoluti...
Mutations are the ultimate source of heritable variation for evolution. Understanding how mutation r...
Long term evolution experiments have tested the importance of genetic and environmental factors in i...
International audienceMutations are the ultimate source of heritable variation for evolution. Unders...
Parallel and convergent evolution have been remarkably common observations in molecular adaptation b...
Colony counts of competitions measuring the effect of pykF mutations in the ancestral strain (REL606...
Newly arising mutations create genetic variation which natural selection can act on to favor organis...
Beneficial mutations are intuitively relevant to understanding adaptation [1-3], yet not all benefic...