Evolutionary dynamics of phenotype-structured populations: from individual-level mechanisms to population-level consequences
Authored by Barry D Hughes, Rebecca H Chisholm, Tommaso Lorenzi, Laurent Desvillettes
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1007/s00033-016-0690-7
Sponsors:
French National Research Agency (ANR)
Australian Research Council (ARC)
Platforms:
MATLAB
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Epigenetic mechanisms are increasingly recognised as integral to the
adaptation of species that face environmental changes. In particular, empirical work has provided important insights into the contribution of
epigenetic mechanisms to the persistence of clonal species, from which a
number of verbal explanations have emerged that are suited to logical
testing by proof-of-concept mathematical models. Here, we present a
stochastic agent-based model and a related deterministic
integrodifferential equation model for the evolution of a
phenotype-structured population composed of asexually-reproducing and
competing organisms which are exposed to novel environmental conditions.
This setting has relevance to the study of biological systems where
colonising asexual populations must survive and rapidly adapt to hostile
environments, like pathogenesis, invasion and tumour metastasis. We
explore how evolution might proceed when epigenetic variation in gene
expression can change the reproductive capacity of individuals within
the population in the new environment. Simulations and analyses of our
models clarify the conditions under which certain evolutionary paths are
possible and illustrate that while epigenetic mechanisms may facilitate
adaptation in asexual species faced with environmental change, they can
also lead to a type of ``epigenetic load{''} and contribute to
extinction. Moreover, our results offer a formal basis for the claim
that constant environments favour individuals with low rates of
stochastic phenotypic variation. Finally, our model provides a ``proof
of concept{''} of the verbal hypothesis that phenotypic stability is a
key driver in rescuing the adaptive potential of an asexual lineage and
supports the notion that intense selection pressure can, to an extent, offset the deleterious effects of high phenotypic instability and biased
epimutations, and steer an asexual population back from the brink of an
evolutionary dead end.
Tags
selection
cancer
Model
Space
Equation
Resistance
Parasite virulence
Traveling-waves
Steady-states
Trait