Origin of Sex Revisited |
| |
Authors: | Mauro Santos Elias Zintzaras Eörs Szathmáry |
| |
Institution: | (1) Collegium Budapest, Institute for Advanced Study, Szentháromság u. 2, Budapest, Hungary;(2) Departament de Genètica i de Microbiologia, Grup de Biologia Evolutiva, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Bellaterra, Barcelona, Spain; (author for correspondence, e-mail;(3) National Agricultural Research Foundation (N.AG.RE.F.), 19 Egialias and Chalepa, Maroussi, Greece;(4) Department of Plant Taxonomy and Ecology, Eötvös University, 2 Ludovika tér, Budapest, Hungary |
| |
Abstract: | Why did sex ever arise in the first place? Why it does not disappear in view of the greater efficiency of asexuals? These are clearly two different questions, and we suggest here that the solution for the origin of sex does not necessarily come from theoretical considerations based on currently existing genetic systems. Thus, while we agree with a number of authors in that the emergence of sex (understood as the exchange of genetic material between genomes) is deeply rooted in the origin of life and happened during the very early stages in the transition from individual genes (`replicators') to bacteria-like cells (`reproducers'), we challenge the idea that recombinational repair was the major selective force for the emergence of sex. Taking the stochastic corrector model as a starting point, we provide arguments that question the putative costs of redundancy in primitive protocells. In addition, if genes that cause intragenomic conflict (i.e., parasites) are taken into account, it is certainly wrong to suggest that cellular fusion would be beneficial at the population level (although this strong claim needs some qualifications). However, when a continuous input of deleterious mutations that impair the fitness of the protocell as a whole is considered in the model (in the realistic range in which stable mutant distributions of quasi-species within compartments are established), there are circumstances when sex could be beneficial as a side effect of the dynamic equilibrium between cellular fusion-mutation-selection. The scenario we have explored numerically is fully consistent with the idea that the universal ancestor was not a discrete entity but an ensemble of proto-organisms that exchanged much genetic information. |
| |
Keywords: | competition cooperation deleterious mutations genomic conflict origin of sex parasites selfish replicators stochastic corrector model |
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录! |
|