Partição de nicho na coevolução de 2 distintas enzimas de RNA

domingo, maio 03, 2009

Niche partitioning in the coevolution of 2 distinct RNA enzymes
Sarah B. Voytek and Gerald F. Joyce,1
+Author Affiliations

Departments of Chemistry and Molecular Biology and The Skaggs Institute for Chemical Biology, The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, CA 92037
Contributed by Gerald F. Joyce, March 27, 2009 (sent for review February 9, 2009)

Abstract

Organisms that compete for limited resources within a common environment may evolve traits that allow them to exploit distinct ecological niches, thus enabling multiple species to coexist within the same habitat. The process of niche partitioning now has been captured at the molecular level, employing the method of continuous in vitro evolution. Mixed populations of 2 different “species” of RNA enzymes were made to compete for limited amounts of one or more substrates, with utilization of the substrate being necessary for amplification of the RNA. Evolution in the presence of a single substrate led to the extinction of one or the other enzyme, whereas evolution in the presence of 5 alternative substrates led to the accumulation of mutations that allowed each enzyme to exploit a different preferred resource. The evolved enzymes were capable of sustained coevolution within a common environment, exemplifying the emergence of stable ecological niche behavior in a model system. Biochemical characterization of the 2 evolved enzymes revealed marked differences in their kinetic properties and adaptive strategies. One enzyme reacted with its preferred substrate ≈100-fold faster than the other, but the slower-reacting species produced 2- to 3-fold more progeny per reacted parent molecule. The in vitro coevolution of 2 or more species of RNA enzymes will make possible further studies in molecular ecology, including the exploration of more complex behaviors, such as predation or cooperation, under controlled laboratory conditions.

in vitro evolution ligase molecular ecology ribozyme

Footnotes

1To whom correspondence should be addresssed at: 10550 North Torrey Pines Road, La Jolla, CA 92037. E-mail: gjoyce@scripps.edu

Author contributions: S.B.V. and G.F.J. designed research; S.B.V. performed research; S.B.V. and G.F.J. analyzed data; and S.B.V. and G.F.J. wrote the paper.

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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