Pamela F. Fahey’s research while affiliated with The Washington Institute for Near East Policy and other places

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Publications (2)


Figure 1. Structure of the tryptophan synthase tetramer. The α  
Table 2 : Time to Trp + Reversion in Liquid Culture for trpA Mutant Plasmids in Host Strain FTP3917
Figure 3. Plasmid pWS1. See reference 21 for details.  
Table 3 : Effect of Growth in Solid Culture on Reversion of trpA Mutant Plasmids in Host Strain FTP3917
Table 4 : Strain Doubling Times *

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Reductive Evolution Can Prevent Populations from Taking Simple Adaptive Paths to High Fitness
  • Article
  • Full-text available

April 2010

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193 Reads

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11 Citations

BIO-Complexity

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Stephanie Ebnet

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Pamela F. Fahey

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New functions requiring multiple mutations are thought to be evolutionarily feasible if they can be achieved by means of adaptive paths-successions of simple adaptations each involving a single mutation. The presence or absence of these adaptive paths to new function therefore constrains what can evolve. But since emerging functions may require costly over-expression to improve fitness, it is also possible for reductive (i.e., cost-cutting) mutations that eliminate over-expression to be adaptive. Consequently, the relative abundance of these kinds of adaptive paths--constructive paths leading to new function versus reductive paths that increase metabolic efficiency--is an important evolutionary constraint. To study the impact of this constraint, we observed the paths actually taken during long-term laboratory evolution of an Escherichia coli strain carrying a doubly mutated trpA gene. The presence of these two mutations prevents tryptophan biosynthesis. One of the mutations is partially inactivating, while the other is fully inactivating, thus permitting a two-step adaptive path to full tryptophan biosynthesis. Despite the theoretical existence of this short adaptive path to high fitness, multiple independent lines grown in tryptophan-limiting liquid culture failed to take it. Instead, cells consistently acquired mutations that reduced expression of the double-mutant trpA gene. Our results show that competition between reductive and constructive paths may significantly decrease the likelihood that a particular constructive path will be taken. This finding has particular significance for models of gene recruitment, since weak new functions are likely to require costly over-expression in order to improve fitness. If reductive, cost-cutting mutations are more abundant than mutations that convert or improve function, recruitment may be unlikely even in cases where a short adaptive path to a new function exists.

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Reductive Evolution Can Prevent Populations from Taking Simple Adaptive Paths to High Fitness

January 2010

·

338 Reads

·

12 Citations

BIO-Complexity

New functions requiring multiple mutations are thought to be evolutionarily feasible if they can be achieved by means of adaptive paths—successions of simple adaptations each involving a single mutation. The presence or absence of these adaptive paths to new function therefore constrains what can evolve. But since emerging functions may require costly over-expression to improve fitness, it is also possible for reductive (i.e., cost-cutting) mutations that eliminate over-expression to be adaptive. Consequently, the relative abundance of these kinds of adaptive paths— constructive paths leading to new function versus reductive paths that increase metabolic efficiency—is an important evolutionary constraint. To study the impact of this constraint, we observed the paths actually taken during long-term laboratory evolution of an Escherichia coli strain carrying a doubly mutated trpA gene. The presence of these two mutations prevents tryptophan biosynthesis. One of the mutations is partially inactivating, while the other is fully inactivating, thus permitting a two-step adaptive path to full tryptophan biosynthesis. Despite the theoretical existence of this short adaptive path to high fitness, multiple independent lines grown in tryptophan-limiting liquid culture failed to take it. Instead, cells consistently acquired mutations that reduced expression of the double-mutant trpA gene. Our results show that competition between reductive and constructive paths may significantly decrease the likelihood that a particular constructive path will be taken. This finding has particular significance for models of gene recruitment, since weak new functions are likely to require costly over-expression in order to improve fitness. If reductive, cost-cutting mutations are more abundant than mutations that convert or improve function, recruitment may be unlikely even in cases where a short adaptive path to a new function exists. Cite as: Gauger AK, Ebnet S, Fahey PF, Seelke R (2010) Reductive evolution can prevent populations from taking simple adaptive paths to high fitness. BIO-Complexity 2010(2):1-9. Copyright: © 2010 Gauger, Ebnet, Fahey, and Seelke. This open-access article is published under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits free distribution and reuse in derivative works provided the original author(s) and source are credited.

Citations (2)


... The first is that scientific evidence strongly indicates that fitness landscapes are not "fine-tuned" in the way required by Kojonen's model. The work of ID theorists Douglas Axe, Ann Gauger, Stephen Meyer, and others is especially relevant in this regard (Axe 2000(Axe , 2004(Axe , 2016Meyer 2009Meyer , 2013Meyer , 2021Gauger et al. 2010;Gauger and Axe 2011;Reeves et al. 2014). We will analyze this research (and Kojonen's response) in the next section. ...

Reference:

On the Relationship between Design and Evolution
Reductive Evolution Can Prevent Populations from Taking Simple Adaptive Paths to High Fitness

BIO-Complexity

... The new species, which has become unable to mate and reproduce with its parental species, later migrated back to where its ancestors once lived. selection, that two beneficial mutations often cancel each other's functions, and that for each constructive mutation there are many sidetracks that prevent an organism from taking the constructive path (Axe 2004; Gauger et al. 2010; Tan 2015; Taylor et al. 2001). Not only are there unbridgeable discontinuities in between domains of life, but also within each domain of life, as shown by the taxonomically restricted distribution of the essential genes of diverse organisms, including seven bacteria (Mycoplasma genitalium, Bacillus subtilis, Helicobacter pylori, Haemophilus influenza, Acinetobacter, Escherichia coli, and Caulobacter crescentus) and five eukaryotes (Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Caenorhabditis elegans, Drosophila melanogaster, Mus musculus, and Homo sapiens) (Tan 2015). ...

Reductive Evolution Can Prevent Populations from Taking Simple Adaptive Paths to High Fitness

BIO-Complexity