114 research outputs found
Error Thresholds on Dynamic Fittness-Landscapes
In this paper we investigate error-thresholds on dynamics fitness-landscapes.
We show that there exists both lower and an upper threshold, representing
limits to the copying fidelity of simple replicators. The lower bound can be
expressed as a correction term to the error-threshold present on a static
landscape. The upper error-threshold is a new limit that only exists on dynamic
fitness-landscapes. We also show that for long genomes on highly dynamic
fitness-landscapes there exists a lower bound on the selection pressure needed
to enable effective selection of genomes with superior fitness independent of
mutation rates, i.e., there are distinct limits to the evolutionary parameters
in dynamic environments.Comment: 5 page
Recursiveness, Switching, and Fluctuations in a Replicating Catalytic Network
A protocell model consisting of mutually catalyzing molecules is studied in
order to investigate how chemical compositions are transferred recursively
through cell divisions under replication errors. Depending on the path rate,
the numbers of molecules and species, three phases are found: fast switching
state without recursive production, recursive production, and itinerancy
between the above two states. The number distributions of the molecules in the
recursive states are shown to be log-normal except for those species that form
a core hypercycle, and are explained with the help of a heuristic argument.Comment: 4 pages (with 7 figures (6 color)), submitted to PR
Spatial Pattern Switching Enables Cyclic Evolution in Spatial Epidemics
Infectious diseases often spread as spatial epidemic outbreak waves. A number of model studies have shown that such spatial pattern formation can have important consequences for the evolution of pathogens. Here, we show that such spatial patterns can cause cyclic evolutionary dynamics in selection for the length of the infectious period. The necessary reversal in the direction of selection is enabled by a qualitative change in the spatial pattern from epidemic waves to irregular local outbreaks. The spatial patterns are an emergent property of the epidemic system, and they are robust against changes in specific model assumptions. Our results indicate that emergent spatial patterns can act as a rich source for complexity in pathogen evolution
Evolutionary instability of Zero Determinant strategies demonstrates that winning isn't everything
Zero Determinant (ZD) strategies are a new class of probabilistic and
conditional strategies that are able to unilaterally set the expected payoff of
an opponent in iterated plays of the Prisoner's Dilemma irrespective of the
opponent's strategy, or else to set the ratio between a ZD player's and their
opponent's expected payoff. Here we show that while ZD strategies are weakly
dominant, they are not evolutionarily stable and will instead evolve into less
coercive strategies. We show that ZD strategies with an informational advantage
over other players that allows them to recognize other ZD strategies can be
evolutionarily stable (and able to exploit other players). However, such an
advantage is bound to be short-lived as opposing strategies evolve to
counteract the recognition.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures. Change in title (again!) to comply with Nature
Communications requirements. To appear in Nature Communication
Limited role of spatial selfstructuring in emergent trade-offs during pathogen evolution
Pathogen transmission and virulence are main evolutionary variables broadly assumed to be linked
through trade-offs. In well-mixed populations, these trade-offs are often ascribed to physiological
restrictions, while populations with spatial self-structuring might evolve emergent trade-offs. Here,
we reexamine a spatially-explicit, SIR model of the latter kind proposed by Ballegooijen and Boerlijst
with the aim of characterising the mechanisms causing the emergence of the trade-off and its structural
robustness. Using invadability criteria, we establish the conditions under which an evolutionary
feedback between transmission and virulence mediated by pattern formation can poise the system to
a critical boundary separating a disordered state (without emergent trade-off) from a self-structured
phase (where the trade-off emerges), and analytically calculate the functional shape of the boundary
in a certain approximation. Beyond evolutionary parameters, the success of an invasion depends
on the size and spatial structure of the invading and invaded populations. Spatial self-structuring is
often destroyed when hosts are mobile, changing the evolutionary dynamics to those of a well-mixed
population. In a metapopulation scenario, the systematic extinction of the pathogen in the disordered
phase may counteract the disruptive effect of host mobility, favour pattern formation and therefore
recover the emergent trade-off.This work has been supported by the Spanish Ministerio de EconomÃa, Industria y Competitividad and FEDER
funds of the EU through grants ViralESS (FIS2014-57686-P and FIS2017-84256-P). The internship of VB was
financed by the Severo Ochoa Centers of Excellence Program (SEV-2013-0347)
Phase transition and selection in a four-species cyclic Lotka-Volterra model
We study a four species ecological system with cyclic dominance whose
individuals are distributed on a square lattice. Randomly chosen individuals
migrate to one of the neighboring sites if it is empty or invade this site if
occupied by their prey. The cyclic dominance maintains the coexistence of all
the four species if the concentration of vacant sites is lower than a threshold
value. Above the treshold, a symmetry breaking ordering occurs via growing
domains containing only two neutral species inside. These two neutral species
can protect each other from the external invaders (predators) and extend their
common territory. According to our Monte Carlo simulations the observed phase
transition is equivalent to those found in spreading models with two equivalent
absorbing states although the present model has continuous sets of absorbing
states with different portions of the two neutral species. The selection
mechanism yielding symmetric phases is related to the domain growth process
whith wide boundaries where the four species coexist.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Multilevel Selection in Models of Prebiotic Evolution II: A Direct Comparison of Compartmentalization and Spatial Self-Organization
Multilevel selection has been indicated as an essential factor for the evolution of complexity in interacting RNA-like replicator systems. There are two types of multilevel selection mechanisms: implicit and explicit. For implicit multilevel selection, spatial self-organization of replicator populations has been suggested, which leads to higher level selection among emergent mesoscopic spatial patterns (traveling waves). For explicit multilevel selection, compartmentalization of replicators by vesicles has been suggested, which leads to higher level evolutionary dynamics among explicitly imposed mesoscopic entities (protocells). Historically, these mechanisms have been given separate consideration for the interests on its own. Here, we make a direct comparison between spatial self-organization and compartmentalization in simulated RNA-like replicator systems. Firstly, we show that both mechanisms achieve the macroscopic stability of a replicator system through the evolutionary dynamics on mesoscopic entities that counteract that of microscopic entities. Secondly, we show that a striking difference exists between the two mechanisms regarding their possible influence on the long-term evolutionary dynamics, which happens under an emergent trade-off situation arising from the multilevel selection. The difference is explained in terms of the difference in the stability between self-organized mesoscopic entities and externally imposed mesoscopic entities. Thirdly, we show that a sharp transition happens in the long-term evolutionary dynamics of the compartmentalized system as a function of replicator mutation rate. Fourthly, the results imply that spatial self-organization can allow the evolution of stable folding in parasitic replicators without any specific functionality in the folding itself. Finally, the results are discussed in relation to the experimental synthesis of chemical Darwinian systems and to the multilevel selection theory of evolutionary biology in general. To conclude, novel evolutionary directions can emerge through interactions between the evolutionary dynamics on multiple levels of organization. Different multilevel selection mechanisms can produce a difference in the long-term evolutionary trend of identical microscopic entities
Adaptation of HIV-1 Depends on the Host-Cell Environment
Many viruses have the ability to rapidly develop resistance against antiviral drugs and escape from the host immune system. To which extent the host environment affects this adaptive potential of viruses is largely unknown. Here we show that for HIV-1, the host-cell environment is key to the adaptive potential of the virus. We performed a large-scale selection experiment with two HIV-1 strains in two different T-cell lines (MT4 and C8166). Over 110 days of culture, both virus strains adapted rapidly to the MT4 T-cell line. In contrast, when cultured on the C8166 T-cell line, the same strains did not show any increase in fitness. By sequence analyses and infections with viruses expressing either yellow or cyan fluorescent protein, we were able to show that the absence of adaptation was linked to a lower recombination rate in the C8166 T-cell line. Our findings suggest that if we can manipulate the host-cellular factors that mediate viral evolution, we may be able to significantly retard viral adaptability
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