Do genetically closely related organisms under identical, but strong selection pressure converge to a common resistant genotype or will they diverge to different genomic solutions? This question gets at the heart of how rough is the fitness landscape in the local vicinity of two closely related strains under stress. We chose a Growth Advantage in Stationary Phase (GASP) Escherichia coli strain to address this question because the GASP strain has very similar fitness to the wild-type (WT) strain in the absence of metabolic stress but in the presence of metabolic stress continues to divide and does not enter into stationary phase. We find that under strong antibiotic selection pressure by the fluoroquinolone antibiotic ciprofloxacin in a complex ecology that the GASP strain rapidly evolves in under 20 h missense mutation in gyrA only 2 amino acids removed from the WT strain indicating a convergent solution, yet does not evolve the other 3 mutations of the WT strain. Further the GASP strain evolves a prophage e14 excision which completely inhibits biofilm formation in the mutant strain, revealing the hidden complexity of E. coli evolution to antibiotics as a function of selection pressure. We conclude that there is a cryptic roughness to fitness landscapes in the absence of stress.
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You cannot tell a book by looking at the cover: Cryptic complexity in bacterial evolution
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September 2014
Research Article|
September 09 2014
You cannot tell a book by looking at the cover: Cryptic complexity in bacterial evolution
Qiucen Zhang;
Qiucen Zhang
1Department of Physics,
University of Illinois
, Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois 61801, USA
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Julia Bos;
Julia Bos
2Department of Physics,
Princeton University
, Princeton, New Jersey 08544, USA
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Grigory Tarnopolskiy;
Grigory Tarnopolskiy
2Department of Physics,
Princeton University
, Princeton, New Jersey 08544, USA
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James C. Sturm;
James C. Sturm
3Department of Electrical Engineering,
Princeton University
, Princeton, New Jersey 08544, USA
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Hyunsung Kim;
Hyunsung Kim
4Genome Sequencing Center,
University of California
, Santa Cruz, California 95064, USA
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Nader Pourmand;
Nader Pourmand
4Genome Sequencing Center,
University of California
, Santa Cruz, California 95064, USA
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Robert H. Austin
Robert H. Austin
2Department of Physics,
Princeton University
, Princeton, New Jersey 08544, USA
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Biomicrofluidics 8, 052004 (2014)
Article history
Received:
June 30 2014
Accepted:
August 20 2014
Citation
Qiucen Zhang, Julia Bos, Grigory Tarnopolskiy, James C. Sturm, Hyunsung Kim, Nader Pourmand, Robert H. Austin; You cannot tell a book by looking at the cover: Cryptic complexity in bacterial evolution. Biomicrofluidics 1 September 2014; 8 (5): 052004. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4894410
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