January 12, 2009 -- Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciencia scientists turn back clock on evolution
in fruit fly to provide key insights into basic mechanisms of evolution
In
his book, Wonderful World, Stephen Jay Gould writes about an experiment
of 'replaying life's tape', wherein one could go back in time, let the
tape of life play again and see if 'the repetition looks at all like
the original'. Evolutionary biology tells us that it wouldn't look the
same - the outcome of evolution is contingent on everything that came
before. Now, scientists at the Instituto Gulbenkian de Ci�ncia (IGC) in
Portugal, New York University and the University of California Irvine,
provide the first quantitative genetic evidence of why this is so.
In this study, to be published online this week in the journal Nature
Genetics, Henrique Teotónio and his colleagues recreated natural
selection in real-time, in the laboratory (rather than based on
inferences from fossil records or from comparing existing natural
populations) and provide the first quantitative evidence for natural
selection on so-called standing genetic variation - a process long
thought to be operating in natural populations that reproduce sexually
but which, until now, had never been demonstrated.
The
researchers used laboratory-grown populations of fruit fly (Drosophila
melanogaster), derived from an original group of flies, harvested from
the wild back in 1975. These ancestral flies were grown in the
laboratory, for two decades, under different environmental conditions,
(such as starvation and longer life-cycles) so that each population was
selected for specific characteristics. Henrique Teotónio and his
colleagues placed these populations back in the ancestral environment,
for 50 generations, to impose reverse evolution on the flies, and then
looked at the genetic changes in certain areas of chromosome 3 of these
flies.
Says Henrique, 'In 2001 we showed that evolution is
reversible in as far as phenotypes are concerned, but even then, only
to a point. Indeed, not all the characteristics evolved back to the
ancestral state. Furthermore, some characteristics reverse-evolved
rapidly, while others took longer. Reverse evolution seems to stop when
the populations of flies achieve adaptation to the ancestral
environment, which may not coincide with the ancestral state. In this
study, we have shown that underlying these phenomena is the fact that,
at the genetic level, convergence to the ancestral state is on the
order of 50%, that is, on average, only half of the gene frequencies
revert to the ancestral gene frequencies - evolution is contingent upon
history at the genetic level too'.
These findings provide
further insights into the basic understanding of how evolution and
diversity are generated and maintained. On the one hand, it provides
evidence for evolution happening through changes in the distribution of
alleles in a population (so-called standing genetic variation), from
generation to generation, rather than the appearance of mutations, from
one generation to the next. On the other hand, as Henrique notes, 'It
has implications for the definition of biodiversity: some of the
'reversed' flies may be phenotypically identical to the ancestral
flies, but they are genetically different. How then do we define
biodiversity?'
Source : Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciencia