Shared molecular targets confer resistance over short and long evolutionary timescales
Date Issued
2019-01-01
Author(s)
Li, Jing
Vázquez-García, Ignacio
Persson, Karl
González, Asier
Yue, Jia-Xing
Barré, Benjamin
Long, Anthony
Warringer, Jonas
Mustonen, Ville
Liti, Gianni
DOI
10.1093/molbev/msz006
Abstract
Pre-existing and de novo genetic variants can both drive adaptation to environmental changes, but their relative contributions and interplay remain poorly understood. Here we investigated the evolutionary dynamics in drug-treated yeast populations with different levels of pre-existing variation by experimental evolution coupled with time-resolved sequencing and phenotyping. We found a doubling of pre-existing variation alone boosts the adaptation by 64.1% and 51.5% in hydroxyurea and rapamycin respectively. The causative pre-existing and de novo variants were selected on shared targets: RNR4 in hydroxyurea and TOR1, TOR2 in rapamycin. Interestingly, the pre-existing and de novo TOR variants map to different functional domains and act via distinct mechanisms. The pre-existing TOR variants from two domesticated strains exhibited opposite rapamycin resistance effects, reflecting lineage-specific functional divergence. This study provides a dynamic view on how pre-existing and de novo variants interactively drive adaptation and deepens our understanding of clonally evolving populations.
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