Publication | Open Access
Long-term evolution is surprisingly predictable in lattice proteins
15
Citations
30
References
2013
Year
Lattice ProteinsFitnessMolecular BiologyNatural SelectionMolecular EcologyProtein FoldingMolecular AdaptationEvolutionary DynamicProtein ModelingProtein Structure PredictionPopulation GeneticsStructural BiologyBiologyNatural Selection ActsNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyComputational BiologyProtein EvolutionEvolutionary TheorySystems BiologyMedicineAdaptive Variation
It has long been debated whether natural selection acts primarily upon individual organisms, or whether it also commonly acts upon higher-level entities such as lineages. Two arguments against the effectiveness of long-term selection on lineages have been (i) that long-term evolutionary outcomes will not be sufficiently predictable to support a meaningful long-term fitness and (ii) that short-term selection on organisms will almost always overpower long-term selection. Here, we use a computational model of protein folding and binding called 'lattice proteins'. We quantify the long-term evolutionary success of lineages with two metrics called the k-fitness and k-survivability. We show that long-term outcomes are surprisingly predictable in this model: only a small fraction of the possible outcomes are ever realized in multiple replicates. Furthermore, the long-term fitness of a lineage depends only partly on its short-term fitness; other factors are also important, including the 'evolvability' of a lineage-its capacity to produce adaptive variation. In a system with a distinct short-term and long-term fitness, evolution need not be 'short-sighted': lineages may be selected for their long-term properties, sometimes in opposition to short-term selection. Similar evolutionary basins of attraction have been observed in vivo, suggesting that natural biological lineages will also have a predictive long-term fitness.
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