Abstract

The experimental evolution of laboratory populations of microbes provides an opportunity to observe the evolutionary dynamics of adaptation in real time. Until very recently, however, such studies have been limited by our inability to systematically find mutations in evolved organisms. We overcome this limitation by using a variety of DNA microarray-based techniques to characterize genetic changes—including point mutations, structural changes, and insertion variation—that resulted from the experimental adaptation of 24 haploid and diploid cultures of Saccharomyces cerevisiae to growth in either glucose, sulfate, or phosphate-limited chemostats for ∼200 generations. We identified frequent genomic amplifications and rearrangements as well as novel retrotransposition events associated with adaptation. Global nucleotide variation detection in ten clonal isolates identified 32 point mutations. On the basis of mutation frequencies, we infer that these mutations and the subsequent dynamics of adaptation are determined by the batch phase of growth prior to initiation of the continuous phase in the chemostat. We relate these genotypic changes to phenotypic outcomes, namely global patterns of gene expression, and to increases in fitness by 5–50%. We found that the spectrum of available mutations in glucose- or phosphate-limited environments combined with the batch phase population dynamics early in our experiments allowed several distinct genotypic and phenotypic evolutionary pathways in response to these nutrient limitations. By contrast, sulfate-limited populations were much more constrained in both genotypic and phenotypic outcomes. Thus, the reproducibility of evolution varies with specific selective pressures, reflecting the constraints inherent in the system-level organization of metabolic processes in the cell. We were able to relate some of the observed adaptive mutations (e.g., transporter gene amplifications) to known features of the relevant metabolic pathways, but many of the mutations pointed to genes not previously associated with the relevant physiology. Thus, in addition to answering basic mechanistic questions about evolutionary mechanisms, our work suggests that experimental evolution can also shed light on the function and regulation of individual metabolic pathways.

Highlights

  • The study of organismal evolution at the molecular level is a potent means of understanding how genomes evolve in response to selective pressures

  • We find that the phenotype of adapted individuals, as measured using global gene expression, is much less variable in clones adapted to sulfate limitation than either glucose or phosphate limitation

  • We comprehensively analyzed the genomes of adapted clones and found that those adapted to sulfate limitation almost invariably carry amplifications of the gene encoding a sulfur transporter, but the mutations in individuals adapted to glucose and phosphate limitation are much more diverse

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Summary

Introduction

The study of organismal evolution at the molecular level is a potent means of understanding how genomes evolve in response to selective pressures. Most kinds of evolutionary analysis are necessarily retrospective: individuals are sampled from a population in the present, genetic variation is assessed, and inferences about the past action of evolutionary forces are drawn from the patterns of observed variation. By their nature, retrospective analyses based on variation at a snapshot in time cannot directly address the dynamics of evolution. The study of experimental evolution of microbes in controlled laboratory environments has a long history, beginning with the demonstration by Luria and Delbruck [1] that adaptive mutations exist in populations prior to selection. Many basic questions regarding evolutionary mechanisms have yet to be successfully addressed experimentally

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