Abstract

As organisms adaptively evolve to a new environment, selection results in the improvement of certain traits, bringing about an increase in fitness. Trade-offs may result from this process if function in other traits is reduced in alternative environments either by the adaptive mutations themselves or by the accumulation of neutral mutations elsewhere in the genome. Though the cost of adaptation has long been a fundamental premise in evolutionary biology, the existence of and molecular basis for trade-offs in alternative environments are not well-established. Here, we show that yeast evolved under aerobic glucose limitation show surprisingly few trade-offs when cultured in other carbon-limited environments, under either aerobic or anaerobic conditions. However, while adaptive clones consistently outperform their common ancestor under carbon limiting conditions, in some cases they perform less well than their ancestor in aerobic, carbon-rich environments, indicating that trade-offs can appear when resources are non-limiting. To more deeply understand how adaptation to one condition affects performance in others, we determined steady-state transcript abundance of adaptive clones grown under diverse conditions and performed whole-genome sequencing to identify mutations that distinguish them from one another and from their common ancestor. We identified mutations in genes involved in glucose sensing, signaling, and transport, which, when considered in the context of the expression data, help explain their adaptation to carbon poor environments. However, different sets of mutations in each independently evolved clone indicate that multiple mutational paths lead to the adaptive phenotype. We conclude that yeasts that evolve high fitness under one resource-limiting condition also become more fit under other resource-limiting conditions, but may pay a fitness cost when those same resources are abundant.

Highlights

  • Microorganisms such as yeast have been used for decades to study adaptive evolution by natural selection

  • Paquin & Adams [8,9] and Ferea et al [13] isolated end-clones from independent evolution experiments originating from a diploid strain of S288c (CP1AB) that was grown under continuous aerobic glucose limitation [7]

  • To determine whether five of these clones from independent lineages maintained their fitness advantage relative to the ancestor in ‘‘novel’’ carbon-source environments, selection coefficients were calculated by competing each clone and their ancestor against a common reference strain in three environments: aerobic glucose limitation, anaerobic glucose limitation and aerobic acetate limitation

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Summary

Introduction

Experimental laboratory evolution using metazoans such as Drosophila [2], and microorganisms such as bacteria [3], algae [4], or yeast [5] has provided the most direct route to these goals, providing deep insight into the forces that guide the adaptive process under different modes of selection [6]. Paquin and Adams monitored the evolution of laboratory strains of the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae [7] during growth under aerobic glucose limitation in continuous culture [8,9]. By monitoring population genetic dynamics over the course of these experiments and characterizing the fitness phenotypes of individual evolved clones, they arrived at two key insights concerning the mechanism of adaptive evolution in clonal populations. As for the specific mechanisms underlying changes in fitness, common phenotypes among adaptive clones included increased glucose transport capacity and characteristic cell morphology changes that increased surface area to volume ratios, as might be expected for cells adapted to better scavenging low concentrations of limiting growth substrate [10]

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