THE EFFECT OF AGING AND HEAT ON THE CHROMOSOMAL MUTATION RATES IN MAIZE AND BARLEY

1933 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 261-264 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. H. Peto

The recent discovery by Navashin (3), that the chromosomal mutation rate in Crepis was influenced by aging of the seed, has been corroborated by observations on the mutation rate of corn plants grown from seed of various ages.A very high chromosomal mutation rate in barley was induced by heat treatments of seed under various conditions of humidity. The most common type of aberration resulting from these treatments appeared to be fracture of the chromosomes either at the attachment constriction, the secondary constriction or the point of attachment of the trabants. The reattachment of fragments to other chromosomes was observed in two instances.Considerable importance is attached to the discovery that a large proportion of the mutant cells are eliminated during the growth of the plant. The principle that only the fittest survive seems equally true of cells as of individuals and groups of plants or animals.

Genetics ◽  
1973 ◽  
Vol 75 (1) ◽  
pp. 133-153
Author(s):  
Margaret Gale Kidwell ◽  
J F Kidwell ◽  
M Nei

ABSTRACT A spontaneous lethal mutation rate approximately twenty to thirty times greater than normal has been discovered in second and third chromosomes derived from an irradiated isogenic line and paired with marked inversion chromosomes. Mutations resulting in reductions of viability of varying magnitude short of complete lethality apparently also occur at a very high rate in the third but not in the second chromosome. The pattern of accumulation of lethal mutations over several generations and viability frequency distributions within generations have been studied in a number of independent experiments. High mutation rate occurs in heterozygous isogenic-derived second and third chromosomes, either together or apart, irrespective of the genetic constitution of nonhomologous chromosomes. High mutation rates were not observed using the same methods with chromosomes of an inbred line from a different source. The possible mechanisms responsible for these results are discussed.


2013 ◽  
Vol 280 (1750) ◽  
pp. 20122047 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roland R. Regoes ◽  
Steven Hamblin ◽  
Mark M. Tanaka

Many viruses, particularly RNA viruses, mutate at a very high rate per genome per replication. One possible explanation is that high mutation rates are selected to meet the challenge of fluctuating environments, including the host immune response. Alternatively, recent studies argue that viruses evolve under a trade-off between replication speed and fidelity such that fast replication is selected, and, along with it, high mutation rates. Here, in addition to these factors, we consider the role of viral life-history properties: namely, the within-host dynamics of viruses resulting from their interaction with the host. We develop mathematical models incorporating factors occurring within and between hosts, including deleterious and advantageous mutations, host death owing to virulence and clearance of viruses by the host. Beneficial mutations confer both a within-host and a transmission advantage. First, we find that advantageous mutations have only a weak effect on the optimal genomic mutation rate. Second, viral life-history properties have a large effect on the mutation rate. Third, when the speed–fidelity trade-off is included, there can be two locally optimal mutation rates. Our analysis provides a way to consider how life-history properties combine with biochemical trade-offs to shape mutation rates.


Author(s):  
P. J. Lee ◽  
D. C. Larbalestier

Several features of the metallurgy of superconducting composites of Nb-Ti in a Cu matrix are of interest. The cold drawing strains are generally of order 8-10, producing a very fine grain structure of diameter 30-50 nm. Heat treatments of as little as 3 hours at 300 C (∼ 0.27 TM) produce a thin (1-3 nm) Ti-rich grain boundary film, the precipitate later growing out at triple points to 50-100 nm dia. Further plastic deformation of these larger a-Ti precipitates by strains of 3-4 produces an elongated ribbon morphology (of order 3 x 50 nm in transverse section) and it is the thickness and separation of these precipitates which are believed to control the superconducting properties. The present paper describes initial attempts to put our understanding of the metallurgy of these heavily cold-worked composites on a quantitative basis. The composite studied was fabricated in our own laboratory, using six intermediate heat treatments. This process enabled very high critical current density (Jc) values to be obtained. Samples were cut from the composite at many processing stages and a report of the structure of a number of these samples is made here.


2006 ◽  
Vol 319 ◽  
pp. 33-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Yoshida ◽  
Kazuhiro Otsuka

Low frequency internal friction of Ti49Ni51 binary and Ti50Ni40Cu10 ternary shape memory alloys has been measured. The effect of solution and aging heat treatments on the damping property was examined. The temperature spectrum of internal friction for TiNi binary alloy consists, in general, of two peaks; one is a transition peak which is associated with the parent-martensite transformation and is rather unstable in a sense that it strongly depends on the frequency and decreases considerably when held at a constant temperature. The other one is a very high peak of the order of 10-2, which appears at around 200K. It appears both on cooling and on heating with no temperature hysteresis, and is very stable. The behavior of the peak is strongly influenced by the heat treatments. The trial of two-stage aging with a purpose of improving the damping capacity has been proved unsatisfactory. TiNiCu has a very high damping, the highest internal friction reaching 0.2, but by quenching from very high temperature, say 1373K, the damping is remarkably lowered. For the realization of high damping the quenching from a certain temperature range around 1173K seems the most preferable condition.


2016 ◽  
Vol 283 (1841) ◽  
pp. 20161785 ◽  
Author(s):  
Long Wang ◽  
Yanchun Zhang ◽  
Chao Qin ◽  
Dacheng Tian ◽  
Sihai Yang ◽  
...  

Mutation rates and recombination rates vary between species and between regions within a genome. What are the determinants of these forms of variation? Prior evidence has suggested that the recombination might be mutagenic with an excess of new mutations in the vicinity of recombination break points. As it is conjectured that domesticated taxa have higher recombination rates than wild ones, we expect domesticated taxa to have raised mutation rates. Here, we use parent–offspring sequencing in domesticated and wild peach to ask (i) whether recombination is mutagenic, and (ii) whether domesticated peach has a higher recombination rate than wild peach. We find no evidence that domesticated peach has an increased recombination rate, nor an increased mutation rate near recombination events. If recombination is mutagenic in this taxa, the effect is too weak to be detected by our analysis. While an absence of recombination-associated mutation might explain an absence of a recombination–heterozygozity correlation in peach, we caution against such an interpretation.


1994 ◽  
Vol 346 (1317) ◽  
pp. 333-343 ◽  

High mutation rates are generally considered to be detrimental to the fitness of multicellular organisms because mutations untune finely tuned biological machinery. However, high mutation rates may be favoured by a need to evade an immune system that has been strongly stimulated to recognize those variants that reproduced earlier during the infection, hiv infections conform to this situation because they are characterized by large numbers of viruses that are continually breaking latency and large numbers that are actively replicating throughout a long period of infection. To be transmitted, HIVS are thus generally exposed to an immune system that has been activated to destroy them in response to prior viral replication in the individual. Increases in sexual contact should contribute to this predicament by favouring evolution toward relatively high rates of replication early during infection. Because rapid replication and high mutation rate probably contribute to rapid progression of infections to aids, the interplay of sexual activity, replication rate, and mutation rate helps explain why HIV-1 has only recently caused a lethal pandemic, even though molecular data suggest that it may have been present in humans for more than a century. This interplay also offers an explanation for geographic differences in progression to cancer found among infections due to the other major group of human retroviruses, human T-cell lymphotropic viruses (HTLV). Finally, it suggests ways in which we can use natural selection as a tool to control the aids pandemic and prevent similar pandemics from arising in the future.


2018 ◽  
Vol 115 (36) ◽  
pp. 8996-9001 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bryan P. Thornlow ◽  
Josh Hough ◽  
Jacquelyn M. Roger ◽  
Henry Gong ◽  
Todd M. Lowe ◽  
...  

Transfer RNAs (tRNAs) are a central component for the biological synthesis of proteins, and they are among the most highly conserved and frequently transcribed genes in all living things. Despite their clear significance for fundamental cellular processes, the forces governing tRNA evolution are poorly understood. We present evidence that transcription-associated mutagenesis and strong purifying selection are key determinants of patterns of sequence variation within and surrounding tRNA genes in humans and diverse model organisms. Remarkably, the mutation rate at broadly expressed cytosolic tRNA loci is likely between 7 and 10 times greater than the nuclear genome average. Furthermore, evolutionary analyses provide strong evidence that tRNA genes, but not their flanking sequences, experience strong purifying selection acting against this elevated mutation rate. We also find a strong correlation between tRNA expression levels and the mutation rates in their immediate flanking regions, suggesting a simple method for estimating individual tRNA gene activity. Collectively, this study illuminates the extreme competing forces in tRNA gene evolution and indicates that mutations at tRNA loci contribute disproportionately to mutational load and have unexplored fitness consequences in human populations.


2004 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 117-124 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Myhre Dupuy ◽  
M. Stenersen ◽  
T. Egeland ◽  
B. Olaisen

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antoine Frénoy ◽  
Sebastian Bonhoeffer

AbstractThe stress-induced mutagenesis paradigm postulates that in response to stress, bacteria increase their genome-wide mutation rate, in turn increasing the chances that a descendant is able to withstand the stress. This has implications for antibiotic treatment: exposure to sub-inhibitory doses of antibiotics has been reported to increase bacterial mutation rates, and thus probably the rate at which resistance mutations appear and lead to treatment failure.Measuring mutation rates under stress, however, is problematic, because existing methods assume there is no death. Yet sub-inhibitory stress levels may induce a substantial death rate. Death events need to be compensated by extra replication to reach a given population size, thus giving more opportunities to acquire mutations. We show that ignoring death leads to a systematic overestimation of mutation rates under stress.We developed a system using plasmid segregation to measure death and growth rates simultaneously in bacterial populations. We use it to replicate classical experiments reporting antibiotic-induced mutagenesis. We found that a substantial death rate occurs at the tested sub-inhibitory concentrations, and taking this death into account lowers and sometimes removes the signal for stress-induced mutagenesis. Moreover even when antibiotics increase mutation rate, sub-inhibitory treatments do not increase genetic diversity and evolvability, again because of effects of the antibiotics on population dynamics.Beside showing that population dynamic is a crucial but neglected parameter affecting evolvability, we provide better experimental and computational tools to study evolvability under stress, leading to a re-assessment of the magnitude and significance of the stress-induced mutagenesis paradigm.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dalit Engelhardt ◽  
Eugene I. Shakhnovich

Mutation rate is a key determinant of the pace as well as outcome of evolution, and variability in this rate has been shown in different scenarios to play a key role in evolutionary adaptation and resistance evolution under stress. Here we investigate the dynamics of resistance fixation in a bacterial population with variable mutation rates and show that evolutionary outcomes are most sensitive to mutation rate variations when the population is subject to environmental and demographic conditions that suppress the evolutionary advantage of high-fitness subpopulations. By directly mapping a molecular-level biophysical fitness function to the system-level dynamics of the population we show that both low and very high, but not intermediate, levels of stress result in a disproportionate effect of hypermutation on resistance fixation and that traditional definitions of the selection coefficient are insufficient to account for this effect. We demonstrate how this behavior is directly tied to the extent of genetic hitchhiking in the system, the propagation of high-mutation rate cells through association with high-fitness mutations. Our results indicate a substantial role for mutation rate flexibility in the evolution of antibiotic resistance under conditions that present a weak advantage over wildtype to resistant cells.


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