Interfering Waves of Adaptation Promote Spatial Mixing.

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Interfering Waves of Adaptation Promote Spatial Mixing. / Martens, Erik Andreas; Hallatschek, Oskar.

I: Genetics (Print), Bind 189, Nr. November, 01.09.2011, s. 1045-1060.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Martens, EA & Hallatschek, O 2011, 'Interfering Waves of Adaptation Promote Spatial Mixing.', Genetics (Print), bind 189, nr. November, s. 1045-1060. https://doi.org/10.1534/genetics.111.130112

APA

Martens, E. A., & Hallatschek, O. (2011). Interfering Waves of Adaptation Promote Spatial Mixing. Genetics (Print), 189(November), 1045-1060. https://doi.org/10.1534/genetics.111.130112

Vancouver

Martens EA, Hallatschek O. Interfering Waves of Adaptation Promote Spatial Mixing. Genetics (Print). 2011 sep. 1;189(November):1045-1060. https://doi.org/10.1534/genetics.111.130112

Author

Martens, Erik Andreas ; Hallatschek, Oskar. / Interfering Waves of Adaptation Promote Spatial Mixing. I: Genetics (Print). 2011 ; Bind 189, Nr. November. s. 1045-1060.

Bibtex

@article{2de7b3ba16f64c7facb4fe11be68d310,
title = "Interfering Waves of Adaptation Promote Spatial Mixing.",
abstract = "A fundamental problem of asexual adaptation is that beneficial substitutions are not efficiently accumulated in large populations: Beneficial mutations often go extinct because they compete with one another in going to fixation. It has been argued that such clonal interference may have led to the evolution of sex and recombination in well-mixed populations. Here, we study clonal interference, and mechanisms of its mitigation, in an evolutionary model of spatially structured populations with uniform selection pressure. Clonal interference is much more prevalent with spatial structure than without, due to the slow wave-like spread of beneficial mutations through space. We find that the adaptation speed of asexuals saturates when the linear habitat size exceeds a characteristic interference length, which becomes shorter with smaller migration and larger mutation rate. The limiting speed is proportional to $(1/2) and $(1/3) in linear and planar habitats, respectively, where the mutational supply $ is the product of mutation rate and local population density. This scaling and the existence of a speed limit should be amenable to experimental tests as they fall far below predicted adaptation speeds for well-mixed populations (that scale as the logarithm of population size). Finally, we show that not only recombination, but also long-range migration is a highly efficient mechanism of relaxing clonal competition in structured populations. Our conservative estimates of the interference length predict prevalent clonal interference in microbial colonies and biofilms, so clonal competition should be a strong driver of both genetic and spatial mixing in those contexts.",
keywords = "Adaptation,Biological,Clonal interference,Spatially extended habitats",
author = "Martens, {Erik Andreas} and Oskar Hallatschek",
year = "2011",
month = sep,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1534/genetics.111.130112",
language = "English",
volume = "189",
pages = "1045--1060",
journal = "Genetics",
issn = "1943-2631",
publisher = "The Genetics Society of America (GSA)",
number = "November",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Interfering Waves of Adaptation Promote Spatial Mixing.

AU - Martens, Erik Andreas

AU - Hallatschek, Oskar

PY - 2011/9/1

Y1 - 2011/9/1

N2 - A fundamental problem of asexual adaptation is that beneficial substitutions are not efficiently accumulated in large populations: Beneficial mutations often go extinct because they compete with one another in going to fixation. It has been argued that such clonal interference may have led to the evolution of sex and recombination in well-mixed populations. Here, we study clonal interference, and mechanisms of its mitigation, in an evolutionary model of spatially structured populations with uniform selection pressure. Clonal interference is much more prevalent with spatial structure than without, due to the slow wave-like spread of beneficial mutations through space. We find that the adaptation speed of asexuals saturates when the linear habitat size exceeds a characteristic interference length, which becomes shorter with smaller migration and larger mutation rate. The limiting speed is proportional to $(1/2) and $(1/3) in linear and planar habitats, respectively, where the mutational supply $ is the product of mutation rate and local population density. This scaling and the existence of a speed limit should be amenable to experimental tests as they fall far below predicted adaptation speeds for well-mixed populations (that scale as the logarithm of population size). Finally, we show that not only recombination, but also long-range migration is a highly efficient mechanism of relaxing clonal competition in structured populations. Our conservative estimates of the interference length predict prevalent clonal interference in microbial colonies and biofilms, so clonal competition should be a strong driver of both genetic and spatial mixing in those contexts.

AB - A fundamental problem of asexual adaptation is that beneficial substitutions are not efficiently accumulated in large populations: Beneficial mutations often go extinct because they compete with one another in going to fixation. It has been argued that such clonal interference may have led to the evolution of sex and recombination in well-mixed populations. Here, we study clonal interference, and mechanisms of its mitigation, in an evolutionary model of spatially structured populations with uniform selection pressure. Clonal interference is much more prevalent with spatial structure than without, due to the slow wave-like spread of beneficial mutations through space. We find that the adaptation speed of asexuals saturates when the linear habitat size exceeds a characteristic interference length, which becomes shorter with smaller migration and larger mutation rate. The limiting speed is proportional to $(1/2) and $(1/3) in linear and planar habitats, respectively, where the mutational supply $ is the product of mutation rate and local population density. This scaling and the existence of a speed limit should be amenable to experimental tests as they fall far below predicted adaptation speeds for well-mixed populations (that scale as the logarithm of population size). Finally, we show that not only recombination, but also long-range migration is a highly efficient mechanism of relaxing clonal competition in structured populations. Our conservative estimates of the interference length predict prevalent clonal interference in microbial colonies and biofilms, so clonal competition should be a strong driver of both genetic and spatial mixing in those contexts.

KW - Adaptation,Biological,Clonal interference,Spatially extended habitats

U2 - 10.1534/genetics.111.130112

DO - 10.1534/genetics.111.130112

M3 - Journal article

VL - 189

SP - 1045

EP - 1060

JO - Genetics

JF - Genetics

SN - 1943-2631

IS - November

ER -

ID: 71129168