Abstract
BackgroundHorizontal gene transfer (HGT) is a process that facilitates the transfer of genetic material between organisms that are not directly related, and thus can affect both the rate of evolution and emergence of traits. Recent phylogenetic studies reveal HGT events are likely ubiquitous in the Tree of Life. However, our knowledge of HGT's role in evolution and biological organization is very limited, mainly due to the lack of ancestral evolutionary signatures and the difficulty to observe complex evolutionary dynamics in a laboratory setting. Here, we utilize a multi-scale microbial evolution model to comprehensively study the effect of HGT on the evolution of complex traits and organization of gene regulatory networks.ResultsLarge-scale simulations reveal a distinct signature of the Distribution of Fitness Effect (DFE) for HGT events: during evolution, while mutation fitness effects become more negative and neutral, HGT events result in a balanced effect distribution. In either case, lethal events are significantly decreased during evolution (33.0% to 3.2%), a clear indication of mutational robustness. Interestingly, evolution was accelerated when populations were exposed to correlated environments of increasing complexity, especially in the presence of HGT, a phenomenon that warrants further investigation. High HGT rates were found to be disruptive, while the average transferred fragment size was linked to functional module size in the underlying biological network. Network analysis reveals that HGT results in larger regulatory networks, but with the same sparsity level as those evolved in its absence. Observed phenotypic variability and co-existing solutions were traced to individual gain/loss of function events, while subsequent re-wiring after fragment integration was necessary for complex traits to emerge.
Highlights
Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) is a process that facilitates the transfer of genetic material between organisms that are not directly related, and can affect both the rate of evolution and emergence of traits
Our multi-scale models and simulations allow, for the first time, to address questions related to HGT that transcend three levels of organization, shedding light on its effect during evolution and providing concrete examples of network integration and operation
Our results show that the effect of HGT is very much dependent on the environmental context which includes, but is not limited to, the genotypic and phenotypic variability of the existing populations
Summary
Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) is a process that facilitates the transfer of genetic material between organisms that are not directly related, and can affect both the rate of evolution and emergence of traits. Horizontal Gene Transfer (HGT) is the transport of genetic material within and across species. It has been estimated that up to a 32% of the bacterial genome is acquired by HGT [3]. Even this number is a lower bound of the HGT events that take place through bacterial evolution, since only a small fraction of transferred material is positively selected, fixed, and observable through phylogenetic analysis [4]. The current belief is that fixation is more probable for auxiliary genes which encode specific functions [5], and that horizontally transferred genes are integrated at the periphery of the network while core network parts remain evolutionarily stable [6]
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