Mutation Rate Inferred From Synonymous Substitutions in a Long-Term Evolution Experiment With Escherichia coli.

Archive ouverte

Wielgoss, Sébastien | Barrick, Jeffrey E | Tenaillon, Olivier | Cruveiller, Stéphane | Chane-Woon-Ming, Béatrice | Médigue, Claudine | Lenski, Richard E | Schneider, Dominique

Edité par CCSD ; Genetics Society of America -

International audience. The quantification of spontaneous mutation rates is crucial for a mechanistic understanding of the evolutionary process. In bacteria, traditional estimates using experimental or comparative genetic methods are prone to statistical uncertainty and consequently estimates vary by over one order of magnitude. With the advent of next-generation sequencing, more accurate estimates are now possible. We sequenced 19 Escherichia coli genomes from a 40,000-generation evolution experiment and directly inferred the point-mutation rate based on the accumulation of synonymous substitutions. The resulting estimate was 8.9 × 10(-11) per base-pair per generation, and there was a significant bias toward increased AT-content. We also compared our results with published genome sequence datasets for other bacterial evolution experiments. Given the power of our approach, our estimate represents the most accurate measure of bacterial base-substitution rates available to date.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Mutation rate dynamics in a bacterial population reflect tension between adaptation and genetic load.

Archive ouverte | Wielgoss, Sébastien | CCSD

International audience. Mutations are the ultimate source of heritable variation for evolution. Understanding how mutation rates themselves evolve is thus essential for quantitatively understanding many evolutionary...

Tempo and mode of genome evolution in a 50,000-generation experiment

Archive ouverte | Tenaillon, Olivier | CCSD

International audience

Epistasis and Allele Specificity in the Emergence of a Stable Polymorphism in Escherichia coli.

Archive ouverte | Plucain, Jessica | CCSD

International audience. : Ecological opportunities promote population divergence into coexisting lineages. However, the genetic mechanisms that enable new lineages to exploit these opportunities are poorly understoo...

Chargement des enrichissements...