Abstract

BackgroundTemperature is a major determinant of spontaneous mutation, but the precise mode, and the underlying mechanisms, of the temperature influences remain less clear. Here we used a mutation accumulation approach combined with whole-genome sequencing to investigate the temperature dependence of spontaneous mutation in an Escherichia coli strain. Experiments were performed under aerobic conditions at 25, 28 and 37 °C, three temperatures that were non-stressful for the bacterium but caused significantly different bacterial growth rates.ResultsMutation rate did not differ between 25 and 28 °C, but was higher at 37 °C. Detailed analyses of the molecular spectrum of mutations were performed; and a particularly interesting finding is that higher temperature led to a bias of mutation to coding, relative to noncoding, DNA. Furthermore, the temperature response of mutation rate was extremely similar to that of metabolic rate, consistent with an idea that metabolic rate predicts mutation rate.ConclusionsTemperature affects mutation rate and the types of mutation supply, both being crucial for the opportunity of natural selection. Our results help understand how temperature drives evolutionary speed of organisms and thus the global patterns of biodiversity. This study also lend support to the metabolic theory of ecology for linking metabolic rate and molecular evolution rate.

Highlights

  • Temperature is a major determinant of spontaneous mutation, but the precise mode, and the underlying mechanisms, of the temperature influences remain less clear

  • Temperature has long been recognized as a major determinant of mutation rate since H

  • We carried out a mutation accumulation experiment with E. coli B REL606 mutS, a mutator strain with a disrupted allele of mutS that is involved in an unbiased DNA repair pathway

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Temperature is a major determinant of spontaneous mutation, but the precise mode, and the underlying mechanisms, of the temperature influences remain less clear. We used a mutation accumulation approach combined with whole-genome sequencing to investigate the temperature dependence of spontaneous mutation in an Escherichia coli strain. Temperature has long been recognized as a major determinant of mutation rate since H. A positive temperature dependence is expected, as higher temperatures may increase both replication errors and DNA damage from free radicals produced as by-products of metabolism [2,3,4,5,6]. The temperature effect on spontaneous mutation is interesting on its own, and crucial for our understanding of the biodiversity patterns on Earth, especially the latitudinal diversity gradient recognized since A.

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call