共同进化
对抗性共同进化
生物
实验进化
适应(眼睛)
寄主(生物学)
进化生物学
分子进化
遗传分化
遗传学
基因
基因组
遗传多样性
性冲突
人口
人口学
神经科学
社会学
性别选择
作者
Steve Paterson,Tom Vogwill,Angus Buckling,Rebecca Benmayor,Andrew J. Spiers,Nicholas R. Thomson,Mike Quail,Frances J.D. Smith,Danielle Walker,Ben Libberton,A Fenton,Neil Hall,Michael A. Brockhurst
出处
期刊:Nature
[Springer Nature]
日期:2010-02-24
卷期号:464 (7286): 275-278
被引量:495
摘要
The Red Queen hypothesis proposes that coevolution of interacting species (such as hosts and parasites) should drive molecular evolution through continual natural selection for adaptation and counter-adaptation. Although the divergence observed at some host-resistance and parasite-infectivity genes is consistent with this, the long time periods typically required to study coevolution have so far prevented any direct empirical test. Here we show, using experimental populations of the bacterium Pseudomonas fluorescens SBW25 and its viral parasite, phage Phi2 (refs 10, 11), that the rate of molecular evolution in the phage was far higher when both bacterium and phage coevolved with each other than when phage evolved against a constant host genotype. Coevolution also resulted in far greater genetic divergence between replicate populations, which was correlated with the range of hosts that coevolved phage were able to infect. Consistent with this, the most rapidly evolving phage genes under coevolution were those involved in host infection. These results demonstrate, at both the genomic and phenotypic level, that antagonistic coevolution is a cause of rapid and divergent evolution, and is likely to be a major driver of evolutionary change within species.
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