Selective pressures on genomes in molecular evolution

01/15/2003
by   Charles Ofria, et al.
0

We describe the evolution of macromolecules as an information transmission process and apply tools from Shannon information theory to it. This allows us to isolate three independent, competing selective pressures that we term compression, transmission, and neutrality selection. The first two affect genome length: the pressure to conserve resources by compressing the code, and the pressure to acquire additional information that improves the channel, increasing the rate of information transmission into each offspring. Noisy transmission channels (replication with mutations) gives rise to a third pressure that acts on the actual encoding of information; it maximizes the fraction of mutations that are neutral with respect to the phenotype. This neutrality selection has important implications for the evolution of evolvability. We demonstrate each selective pressure in experiments with digital organisms.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 2

page 3

page 4

research
07/21/2011

Centric selection: a way to tune the exploration/exploitation trade-off

In this paper, we study the exploration / exploitation trade-off in cell...
research
02/05/2013

Evolvability Is Inevitable: Increasing Evolvability Without the Pressure to Adapt

Why evolvability appears to have increased over evolutionary time is an ...
research
06/10/2014

The Effect of Social Learning on Individual Learning and Evolution

We consider the effects of social learning on the individual learning an...
research
03/06/1999

Evolution of genetic organization in digital organisms

We examine the evolution of expression patterns and the organization of ...
research
09/14/2012

Predator confusion is sufficient to evolve swarming behavior

Swarming behaviors in animals have been extensively studied due to their...
research
02/24/2023

Design and Mechanics of Cable-Driven Rolling Diaphragm Transmission for High-Transparency Robotic Motion

Applications of rolling diaphragm transmissions for medical and teleoper...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset