An organism's upper thermal tolerance is a major driver of its ecology and is a complex, polygenic trait. Given the wide variance in this critical phenotype across the tree of life, it is quite striking that this trait has not proven very evolutionarily labile in experimental evolution studies of microbes. In stark contrast to recent studies, William Henry Dallinger in the 1880s reported increasing the upper thermal limit of microbes he experimentally evolved by >40°C using a very gradual temperature ramping strategy. Using a selection scheme inspired by Dallinger, we sought to increase the upper thermal limit of . This species has a maximum growth temperature of 34-35°C, considerably lower than . After 136 passages on solid plates at progressively higher temperatures, we recovered a clone that can grow at 36°C, a gain of ~1.5°C. Additionally, the evolved clone lost its mitochondrial genome and cannot respire. In contrast, an induced derivative of the ancestor shows a decrease in thermotolerance. Also, incubation of the ancestor at 34°C for 5 days increased the frequency of petite mutants drastically compared to 22°C, supporting the notion that mutation pressure rather than selection drove loss of mtDNA in the evolved clone. These results demonstrate that 's upper thermal limit can be elevated slightly via experimental evolution and corroborate past observations in that high temperature selection schemes can inadvertently lead to production of the potentially undesirable respiratory incompetent phenotype in yeasts.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10276265PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.17912/micropub.biology.000831DOI Listing

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