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Idiosyncratic epistasis creates universals in mutational effects and evolutionary trajectories
Author(s) -
Daniel M. Lyons,
Zhengting Zou,
Haiqing Xu,
Jianzhi Zhang
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
nature ecology and evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.822
H-Index - 57
ISSN - 2397-334X
DOI - 10.1038/s41559-020-01286-y
Subject(s) - epistasis , fitness landscape , evolutionary biology , idiosyncrasy , biology , randomness , problem of universals , mutation , genetic fitness , evolutionary dynamics , genetics , biological evolution , gene , economics , mathematics , population , statistics , linguistics , demography , philosophy , finance , sociology
Patterns of epistasis and shapes of fitness landscapes are of wide interest because of their bearings on a number of evolutionary theories. The common phenomena of slowing fitness increases during adaptations and diminishing returns from beneficial mutations are believed to reflect a concave fitness landscape and a preponderance of negative epistasis. Paradoxically, fitness decreases tend to decelerate and harm from deleterious mutations shrinks during the accumulation of random mutations-patterns thought to indicate a convex fitness landscape and a predominance of positive epistasis. Current theories cannot resolve this apparent contradiction. Here, we show that the phenotypic effect of a mutation varies substantially depending on the specific genetic background and that this idiosyncrasy in epistasis creates all of the above trends without requiring a biased distribution of epistasis. The idiosyncratic epistasis theory explains the universalities in mutational effects and evolutionary trajectories as emerging from randomness due to biological complexity.

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