Selection on mutators is not frequency-dependent.

Elife

Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Center for Computational Molecular Biology, Brown University, Providence, United States.

Published: November 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines how mutator mutations, which increase mutation rates, behave in asexual populations, challenging the idea that their success depends on how many there are at the start.
  • The research uses simulations to demonstrate that the success of mutators isn’t influenced by their initial numbers, even though more of them do increase the chances of pairing with beneficial mutations.
  • Ultimately, the findings suggest that while having more mutators can lead to more chances of successful mutations, individual mutators don't have a better chance of becoming fixed in the population based on how many there are initially.

Article Abstract

The evolutionary fate of mutator mutations - genetic variants that raise the genome-wide mutation rate - in asexual populations is often described as being frequency (or number) dependent. Mutators can invade a population by hitchhiking with a sweeping beneficial mutation, but motivated by earlier experiments results, it has been repeatedly suggested that mutators must be sufficiently frequent to produce such a driver mutation before non-mutators do. Here, we use stochastic, agent-based simulations to show that neither the strength nor the sign of selection on mutators depend on their initial frequency, and while the overall probability of hitchhiking increases predictably with frequency, the per-capita probability of fixation remains unchanged.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6867826PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.51177DOI Listing

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