scholarly journals Selection on the evolution rate as one of factors defining the morphology of multi-cellular organisms

2003 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 59-66
Author(s):  
Vladimir A Berdnikov

Evolution of multicellular organisms was accompanied by multiple extinctions, after which the survived phyletic lineages started to conquer the free ecological space. The question arises: how the selection for adaptation to new environment could affect the organism morphology? The rate of evolutionary change of a structure depends predominantly on the number of loci that control its development. As this number increased in the course of evolution, it is hypothesized that the evolutionary trend for complication of organisms is the consequence of selection for the rate of evolution.

Cells ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (7) ◽  
pp. 1793
Author(s):  
Justin Van Goor ◽  
Diane C. Shakes ◽  
Eric S. Haag

Parker, Baker, and Smith provided the first robust theory explaining why anisogamy evolves in parallel in multicellular organisms. Anisogamy sets the stage for the emergence of separate sexes, and for another phenomenon with which Parker is associated: sperm competition. In outcrossing taxa with separate sexes, Fisher proposed that the sex ratio will tend towards unity in large, randomly mating populations due to a fitness advantage that accrues in individuals of the rarer sex. This creates a vast excess of sperm over that required to fertilize all available eggs, and intense competition as a result. However, small, inbred populations can experience selection for skewed sex ratios. This is widely appreciated in haplodiploid organisms, in which females can control the sex ratio behaviorally. In this review, we discuss recent research in nematodes that has characterized the mechanisms underlying highly skewed sex ratios in fully diploid systems. These include self-fertile hermaphroditism and the adaptive elimination of sperm competition factors, facultative parthenogenesis, non-Mendelian meiotic oddities involving the sex chromosomes, and environmental sex determination. By connecting sex ratio evolution and sperm biology in surprising ways, these phenomena link two “seminal” contributions of G. A. Parker. 


2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
pp. 329-335
Author(s):  
Philip J Gerrish ◽  
Claudia P Ferreira

AbstractThe evolutionary trend toward increasing complexity and social function is ultimately the result of natural selection's paradoxical tendency to foster cooperation through competition. Cooperating populations ranging from complex societies to somatic tissue are constantly under attack, however, by non-cooperating mutants or transformants, called ‘cheaters’. Structure in these populations promotes the formation of cooperating clusters whose competitive superiority can alone be sufficient to thwart outgrowths of cheaters and thereby maintain cooperation. But we find that when cheaters appear too frequently – exceeding a threshold mutation or transformation rate – their scattered outgrowths infiltrate and break up cooperating clusters, resulting in a cascading loss of social cohesiveness, a switch to net positive selection for cheaters and ultimately in the loss of cooperation. Our findings imply that a critically low mutation rate had to be achieved (perhaps through the advent of proofreading and repair mechanisms) before complex cooperative functions, such as those required for multicellularity and social behaviour, could have evolved and persisted. When mutation rate in our model is also allowed to evolve, the threshold is crossed spontaneously after thousands of generations, at which point cheaters rapidly invade. Probing extrapolations of these findings suggest: (1) in somatic tissue, it is neither social retro-evolution alone nor mutation rate evolution alone but the interplay between these two that ultimately leads to oncogenic transitions; the rate of this coevolution might thereby provide an indicator of lifespan of species, terrestrial or not; (2) the likelihood that extraterrestrial life can be expected to be multicellular and social should be affected by ultraviolet and other mutagenic factors.


2018 ◽  
Vol 457 ◽  
pp. 170-179 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jason Olejarz ◽  
Kamran Kaveh ◽  
Carl Veller ◽  
Martin A. Nowak

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Ozan Bozdag ◽  
Eric Libby ◽  
Rozenn Pineau ◽  
Christopher T. Reinhard ◽  
William C. Ratcliff

AbstractAtmospheric oxygen is thought to have played a vital role in the evolution of large, complex multicellular organisms. Challenging the prevailing theory, we show that the transition from an anaerobic to an aerobic world can strongly suppress the evolution of macroscopic multicellularity. Here we select for increased size in multicellular ‘snowflake’ yeast across a range of metabolically-available O2 levels. While yeast under anaerobic and high-O2 conditions evolved to be considerably larger, intermediate O2 constrained the evolution of large size. Through sequencing and synthetic strain construction, we confirm that this is due to O2-mediated divergent selection acting on organism size. We show via mathematical modeling that our results stem from nearly universal evolutionary and biophysical trade-offs, and thus should apply broadly. These results highlight the fact that oxygen is a double-edged sword: while it provides significant metabolic advantages, selection for efficient use of this resource may paradoxically suppress the evolution of macroscopic multicellular organisms.


2016 ◽  
Vol 283 (1834) ◽  
pp. 20160671 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keyne Monro ◽  
Dustin J. Marshall

Gamete dimorphism (anisogamy) defines the sexes in most multicellular organisms. Theoretical explanations for its maintenance usually emphasize the size-related selection pressures of sperm competition and zygote survival, assuming that fertilization of all eggs precludes selection for phenotypes that enhance fertility. In external fertilizers, however, fertilization is often incomplete due to sperm limitation, and the risk of polyspermy weakens the advantage of high sperm numbers that is predicted to limit sperm size, allowing alternative selection pressures to target free-swimming sperm. We asked whether egg size and ejaculate size mediate selection on the free-swimming sperm of Galeolaria caespitosa , a marine tubeworm with external fertilization, by comparing relationships between sperm morphology and male fertility across manipulations of egg size and sperm density. Our results suggest that selection pressures exerted by these factors may aid the maintenance of anisogamy in external fertilizers by limiting the adaptive value of larger sperm in the absence of competition. In doing so, our study offers a more complete explanation for the stability of anisogamy across the range of sperm environments typical of this mating system and identifies new potential for the sexes to coevolve via mutual selection pressures exerted by gametes at fertilization.


1992 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
pp. 280-280
Author(s):  
William E. Stein

Among multicellular organisms, the fossil record of vascular plants is, perhaps, uniquely informative about pattern and process leading to the establishment of major groups. Although classifications above the family level remain highly debatable, especially with regard to level, important insight has been gained into external morphology and internal anatomy of the earliest members of the clade, as well as into general patterns of diversification and change in form through time. Despite these advantages, cladistic methods have brought into sharp focus significant problems with important characters at high taxonomic levels. Putative synapomorphies used to diagnose major groups often have conflicting phylogenetic implications which, according to the cladistic paradigm, must be interpreted as homoplasy. From a biological standpoint, however, unrecognized instances of homoplasy in the character set often seem unlikely due to the complexity of the features involved, and the lack of plausible mechanisms producing multiple parallelisms or reversals by means of “known” processes such as adaptation, homeosis, heterochrony, or functional constraint. Added to this are conceptual and practical problems concerning morphological gaps (and what might bridge them) between recognized groups. One of the most interesting challenges to current approaches are enigmatic fossils early in the history of apparent clades exhibiting unprecedented variability in expression of supposedly diagnostic features. As a result, terminology originally developed to circumscribe alternative morphological states within clades completely breaks down. Perhaps, what's needed here is a more dynamic model of evolutionary change linking hypotheses of synapomorphy with specific changes in the structuring “rules” (or capacities) of development.Among characters used to diagnose major groups of vascular plants, differences in stelar architecture remain among the most important. Comparative evidence suggests that early vascular plants have essentially the same relatively well-understood developmental mechanisms as living plants; vascular tissues differentiate according to hormone (primarily auxin) gradient signals, that are the more-or-less the passive consequence of shoot geometry during growth. Because early plants have an extremely simple organography (dichotomizing stems with no leaves), an unparalleled opportunity exists to understand historical changes leading to establishment of major stelar morphs in the fossil record terms of changed dynamics of continuous serial development at the shoot apex. A computer simulation of vascular tissue patterning under hormone influence will be presented, and suggestions offered regarding the relative plausibility of alternate routes of evolutionary change between major groups.


Genetics ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 147 (2) ◽  
pp. 879-906 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah Perin Otto ◽  
Nick H Barton

One of the oldest hypotheses for the advantage of recombination is that recombination allows beneficial mutations that arise in different individuals to be placed together on the same chromosome. Unless recombination occurs, one of the beneficial alleles is doomed to extinction, slowing the rate at which adaptive mutations are incorporated within a population. We model the effects of a modifier of recombination on the fixation probability of beneficial mutations when beneficial alleles are segregating at other loci. We find that modifier alleles that increase recombination do increase the fixation probability of beneficial mutants and subsequently hitchhike along as the mutants rise in frequency. The strength of selection favoring a modifier that increases recombination is proportional to λ2  Sδr/r when linkage is tight and λ2  S  3δr/N when linkage is loose, where λ is the beneficial mutation rate per genome per generation throughout a population of size N, S is the average mutant effect, r is the average recombination rate, and δr is the amount that recombination is modified. We conclude that selection for recombination will be substantial only if there is tight linkage within the genome or if many loci are subject to directional selection as during periods of rapid evolutionary change.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jason Olejarz ◽  
Kamran Kaveh ◽  
Carl Veller ◽  
Martin A. Nowak

AbstractThe evolution of multicellularity was a major transition in the history of life on earth. Conditions under which multicellularity is favored have been studied theoretically and experimentally. But since the construction of a multicellular organism requires multiple rounds of cell division, a natural question is whether these cell divisions should be synchronous or not. We study a simple population model in which there compete simple multicellular organisms that grow either by synchronous or asynchronous cell divisions. We demonstrate that natural selection can act differently on synchronous and asynchronous cell division, and we offer intuition for why these phenotypes are generally not neutral variants of each other.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennifer T. Pentz ◽  
Pedro Márquez-Zacarías ◽  
Peter J. Yunker ◽  
Eric Libby ◽  
William C. Ratcliff

AbstractAll multicellular organisms develop through one of two basic routes: they either aggregate from free-living cells, creating potentially-chimeric multicellular collectives, or they develop clonally via mother-daughter cellular adhesion. While evolutionary theory makes clear predictions about trade-offs between these developmental modes, these have never been experimentally tested in otherwise genetically-identical organisms. We engineered unicellular baker’s yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) to develop either clonally (‘snowflake’, Δace2), or aggregatively (‘floc’,GAL1p::FLO1), and examined their fitness in a fluctuating environment characterized by periods of growth and selection for rapid sedimentation. When cultured independently, aggregation was far superior to clonal development, providing a 35% advantage during growth, and a 2.5-fold advantage during settling selection. Yet when competed directly, clonally-developing snowflake yeast rapidly displaced aggregative floc. This was due to unexpected social exploitation: snowflake yeast, which do not produce adhesive FLO1, nonetheless become incorporated into flocs at a higher frequency than floc cells themselves. Populations of chimeric clusters settle much faster than floc alone, providing snowflake yeast with a fitness advantage during competition. Mathematical modeling suggests that such developmental cheating may be difficult to circumvent; hypothetical ‘choosy floc’ that avoid exploitation by maintaining clonality pay an ecological cost when rare, often leading to their extinction. Our results highlight the conflict at the heart of aggregative development: non-specific cellular binding provides a strong ecological advantage – the ability to quickly form groups – but this very feature leads to its exploitation.


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