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Parreiras LS, et al.  (2011) Cellular effects and epistasis among three determinants of adaptation in experimental populations of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Eukaryot Cell 10(10):1348-56

Abstract: Epistatic interactions in which the phenotypic effect of an allele is conditional on its genetic background have been shown to play a central part in various evolutionary processes. In a previous study (J. B. Anderson et al., Curr. Biol. 20:1383-1388, 2010; J. R. Dettman, C. Sirjusingh, L. M. Kohn, and J. B. Anderson, Nature 447:585-588, 2007), beginning with a common ancestor, we identified three determinants of fitness as mutant alleles (each designated with the letter "e") that arose in replicate Saccharomyces cerevisiae populations propagated in two different environments, a low-glucose and a high-salt environment. In a low-glucose environment, MDS3e and MKT1e interacted positively to confer a fitness advantage. Also, PMA1e from a high-salt environment interacted negatively with MKT1e in a low-glucose environment, an example of a Dobzhansky-Muller incompatibility that confers reproductive isolation. Here we showed that the negative interaction between PMA1e and MKT1e is mediated by alterations in intracellular pH, while the positive interaction between MDS3e and MKT1e is mediated by changes in gene expression affecting glucose transporter genes. We specifically addressed the evolutionary significance of the positive interaction by showing that the presence of the MDS3 mutation is a necessary condition for the spread and fixation of the new mutations at the identical site in MKT1. The expected mutations in MKT1 rose to high frequencies in two of three experimental populations carrying MDS3e but not in any of three populations carrying the ancestral allele. These data show how positive and negative epistasis can contribute to adaptation and reproductive isolation.

Status: Published Type: Journal Article PubMed ID: 21856932

Topics addressed in this paper

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Topics Topics not linked to Genes Genes linked to topics (#1 - 10 )
BAT1 HXT1 HXT2 HXT3 HXT4 HXT5 HXT6 HXT7 MDS3 MKT1
Additional Literature blue ball blue ball blue ball blue ball blue ball blue ball blue ball blue ball
DNA/RNA Sequence Features blue ball blue ball
Evolution blue ball blue ball
Genomic expression study yg ball
Mutants/Phenotypes blue ball blue ball
Omics yg ball
Primary Literature blue ball blue ball
Regulation of blue ball blue ball blue ball blue ball blue ball blue ball blue ball blue ball

Topics Genes linked to topics (#11 )
PMA1
DNA/RNA Sequence Features blue ball
Evolution blue ball
Mutants/Phenotypes blue ball
Primary Literature blue ball

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