Abstract

The evolutionary transition to multicellularity probably began with the formation of simple undifferentiated cellular groups. Such groups evolve readily in diverse lineages of extant unicellular taxa, suggesting that there are few genetic barriers to this first key step. This may act as a double-edged sword: labile transitions between unicellular and multicellular states may facilitate the evolution of simple multicellularity, but reversion to a unicellular state may inhibit the evolution of increased complexity. In this paper, we examine how multicellular adaptations can act as evolutionary ‘ratchets’, limiting the potential for reversion to unicellularity. We consider a nascent multicellular lineage growing in an environment that varies between favouring multicellularity and favouring unicellularity. The first type of ratcheting mutations increase cell-level fitness in a multicellular context but are costly in a single-celled context, reducing the fitness of revertants. The second type of ratcheting mutations directly decrease the probability that a mutation will result in reversion (either as a pleiotropic consequence or via direct modification of switch rates). We show that both types of ratcheting mutations act to stabilize the multicellular state. We also identify synergistic effects between the two types of ratcheting mutations in which the presence of one creates the selective conditions favouring the other. Ratcheting mutations may play a key role in diverse evolutionary transitions in individuality, sustaining selection on the new higher-level organism by constraining evolutionary reversion.This article is part of the themed issue ‘The major synthetic evolutionary transitions’.

Highlights

  • Complex life has evolved through a series of events in which organisms evolve to become specialized parts of new, ‘higher-level’ organisms [1]

  • A confluence of evidence suggests that simple multicellularity is relatively easy to evolve, but it is susceptible to loss due to reversion when environmental conditions change

  • In ratcheting type 1, we explore the evolution of traits that increase fitness in the multicellular context and decrease fitness in the unicellular context

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Summary

Stabilizing multicellularity through ratcheting

The evolutionary transition to multicellularity probably began with the formation of simple undifferentiated cellular groups Such groups evolve readily in diverse lineages of extant unicellular taxa, suggesting that there are few genetic barriers to this first key step. This may act as a doubleedged sword: labile transitions between unicellular and multicellular states may facilitate the evolution of simple multicellularity, but reversion to a unicellular state may inhibit the evolution of increased complexity. The second type of ratcheting mutations directly decrease the probability that a mutation will result in reversion (either as a pleiotropic consequence or via direct modification of switch rates). This article is part of the themed issue ‘The major synthetic evolutionary transitions’

Introduction
EI environment fitness of cells fitness of cells
Findings
Discussion
Full Text
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