The Impact of Dominance on Adaptation in Changing Environments

被引:6
|
作者
Devi, Archana [1 ]
Jain, Kavita [1 ]
机构
[1] Jawaharlal Nehru Ctr Adv Sci Res, Theoret Sci Unit, Bangalore 560064, Karnataka, India
关键词
changing environment; dominance; fixation; FLUCTUATING SELECTION; BENEFICIAL MUTATION; FIXATION; EVOLUTION;
D O I
10.1534/genetics.120.303519
中图分类号
Q3 [遗传学];
学科分类号
071007 ; 090102 ;
摘要
Natural environments are seldom static and therefore it is important to ask how a population adapts in a changing environment. We consider a finite, diploid population evolving in a periodically changing environment and study how the fixation probability of a rare mutant depends on its dominance coefficient and the rate of environmental change. We find that, in slowly changing environments, the effect of dominance is the same as in the static environment, that is, if a mutant is beneficial (deleterious) when it appears, it is more (less) likely to fix if it is dominant. But, in fast changing environments, the effect of dominance can be different from that in the static environment and is determined by the mutant's fitness at the time of appearance as well as that in the time-averaged environment. We find that, in a rapidly varying environment that is neutral on average, an initially beneficial (deleterious) mutant that arises while selection is decreasing (increasing) has a fixation probability lower (higher) than that for a neutral mutant as a result of which the recessive (dominant) mutant is favored. If the environment is beneficial (deleterious) on average but the mutant is deleterious (beneficial) when it appears in the population, the dominant (recessive) mutant is favored in a fast changing environment. We also find that, when recurrent mutations occur, dominance does not have a strong influence on evolutionary dynamics.
引用
收藏
页码:227 / 240
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] THE CHURCH AND CHANGING ECOLOGICAL DOMINANCE
    Martin, R. R.
    SOCIOLOGY AND SOCIAL RESEARCH, 1941, 25 (03): : 246 - 257
  • [42] Sociobiology: Changing the Dominance Hierarchy
    Qu, Chen
    Dreher, Jean-Claude
    CURRENT BIOLOGY, 2018, 28 (04) : R167 - R169
  • [43] Changing environments, changing biodiversity
    Bradbury, Jane
    FRONTIERS IN ECOLOGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT, 2010, 8 (02) : 64 - 64
  • [44] Gene-flow through space and time: dispersal, dormancy and adaptation to changing environments
    Rafael Rubio de Casas
    Kathleen Donohue
    D. Lawrence Venable
    Pierre-Olivier Cheptou
    Evolutionary Ecology, 2015, 29 : 813 - 831
  • [45] Robot Imitation through Vision, Kinesthetic and Force Features with Online Adaptation to Changing Environments
    Fernandez-Fernandez, Raul
    Victores, Juan G.
    Estevez, David
    Balaguer, Carlos
    2018 IEEE/RSJ INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INTELLIGENT ROBOTS AND SYSTEMS (IROS), 2018, : 6546 - 6551
  • [47] Spectroscopic analyses of chemical adaptation processes within microalgal biomass in response to changing environments
    Vogt, Frank
    ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 2015, 249
  • [48] Cloud-Device Collaborative Adaptation to Continual Changing Environments in the Real-world
    Gan, Yulu
    Pan, Mingjie
    Zhang, Rongyu
    Ling, Zijian
    Zhao, Lingran
    Liu, Jiaming
    Zhang, Shanghang
    2023 IEEE/CVF CONFERENCE ON COMPUTER VISION AND PATTERN RECOGNITION (CVPR), 2023, : 12157 - 12166
  • [49] Spectroscopic analyses of chemical adaptation processes within microalgal biomass in response to changing environments
    Vogt, Frank
    White, Lauren
    ANALYTICA CHIMICA ACTA, 2015, 867 : 18 - 28
  • [50] Gene-flow through space and time: dispersal, dormancy and adaptation to changing environments
    Rubio de Casas, Rafael
    Donohue, Kathleen
    Venable, D. Lawrence
    Cheptou, Pierre-Olivier
    EVOLUTIONARY ECOLOGY, 2015, 29 (06) : 813 - 831