Changing preferences: deformation of single position amino acid fitness landscapes and evolution of proteins

Biol Lett. 2015 Oct;11(10):20150315. doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2015.0315.

Abstract

The fitness landscape-the function that relates genotypes to fitness-and its role in directing evolution are a central object of evolutionary biology. However, its huge dimensionality precludes understanding of even the basic aspects of its shape. One way to approach it is to ask a simpler question: what are the properties of a function that assigns fitness to each possible variant at just one particular site-a single position fitness landscape-and how does it change in the course of evolution? Analyses of genomic data from multiple species and multiple individuals within a species have proved beyond reasonable doubt that fitness functions of positions throughout the genome do themselves change with time, thus shaping protein evolution. Here, I will briefly review the literature that addresses these dynamics, focusing on recent genome-scale analyses of fitness functions of amino acid sites, i.e. vectors of fitnesses of 20 individual amino acid variants at a given position of a protein. The set of amino acids that confer high fitness at a particular position changes with time, and the rate of this change is comparable with the rate at which a position evolves, implying that this process plays a major role in evolutionary dynamics. However, the causes of these changes remain largely unclear.

Keywords: epistasis; macroevolution; microevolution; proteins; selection.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Adaptation, Biological
  • Amino Acids / genetics*
  • Epistasis, Genetic*
  • Evolution, Molecular*
  • Genetic Fitness*
  • Genotype
  • Proteins / genetics*

Substances

  • Amino Acids
  • Proteins