Adaptation through genetic time travel? Fluctuating selection can drive the evolution of bacterial transformationAuthors

by Jan Engelstädter, Danesh Moradigaravand
Research Article Year: 2014

Extra Information

Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 281(1775) 20132609

Abstract

Natural transformation is a process whereby bacteria actively take up DNA from the surrounding environment and incorporate it into their genome. Natural transformation is widespread in bacteria, but its evolutionary significance is still debated. Here, we hypothesize that transformation may confer a fitness advantage in changing environments through a process we term ‘genetic time travel’: by taking up old genes that were retained in the environment, the bacteria may revert to a past genotypic state that proves advantageous in the present or a future environment. We scrutinize our hypothesis by means of a mathematical model involving two bacterial types (transforming and non-transforming), a single locus under natural selection and a free DNA pool. The two bacterial types were competed in environments with changing selection regimes. We demonstrate that for a wide range of parameter values for the DNA …