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Errors in mutagenesis and the benefit of cell-to-cell signalling in the evolution of stress-induced mutagenesis
Author(s) -
Eynat Dellus-Gur,
Yoav Ram,
Lilach Hadany
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
royal society open science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.84
H-Index - 51
ISSN - 2054-5703
DOI - 10.1098/rsos.170529
Subject(s) - mutagenesis , mutation , cell , signalling , biology , genetics , saturated mutagenesis , microbiology and biotechnology , site directed mutagenesis , computational biology , gene , mutant
Stress-induced mutagenesis is a widely observed phenomenon. Theoretical models have shown that stress-induced mutagenesis can be favoured by natural selection due to the beneficial mutations it generates. These models, however, assumed an error-free regulation of mutation rate in response to stress. Here, we explore the effects of errors in the regulation of mutagenesis on the evolution of stress-induced mutagenesis, and consider the role of cell-to-cell signalling. Using theoretical models, we show (i) that stress-induced mutagenesis can be disadvantageous if errors are common; and (ii) that cell-to-cell signalling can allow stress-induced mutagenesis to be favoured by selection even when error rates are high. We conclude that cell-to-cell signalling can facilitate the evolution of stress-induced mutagenesis in microbes through second-order selection.

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