Is evolution always gradual or can it make leaps? We examine a mathematical
model of an evolutionary process on a fitness landscape and obtain analytic
solutions for the probability of multi-mutation leaps, that is, several
mutations occurring simultaneously, within a single generation in one genome,
and being fixed all together in the evolving population. The results indicate
that, for typical, empirically observed combinations of the parameters of the
evolutionary process, namely, effective population size, mutation rate, and
distribution of selection coefficients of mutations, the probability of a
multi-mutation leap is low, and accordingly, the contribution of such leaps is
minor at best. However, we show that, taking sign epistasis into account, leaps
could become an important factor of evolution in cases of substantially
elevated mutation rates, such as stress-induced mutagenesis in microbes. We
hypothesize that stress-induced mutagenesis is an evolvable adaptive strategy.Comment: Extended version, in particular, the section is added on
non-equilibrium model of stress-induced mutagenesi