Science & Technology - Posted by Layne Cameron-Michigan State on Thursday, September 20, 2012 13:48 - 5 Comments    
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E. coli’s new trick evolved in 3 key steps

The researchers tracked E. coli's evolving ability to eat citrate instead of glucose through many generations and identified three key stages of mutation. (Credit: Veer)

MICHIGAN STATE (US) — Scientists have documented how organisms evolve new functions—by looking at what 56,000 generations of E. coli could eat.


The results, published in the current issue of Nature, are revealed through an in-depth, genomics-based analysis that decodes how E. coli bacteria figured out how to supplement a traditional diet of glucose with an extra course of citrate.

“It’s pretty nifty to see a new biological function evolve,” says Zachary Blount, postdoctoral researcher in the Michigan State University BEACON Center for the Study of Evolution in Action.

Straight from the Source

Read the original study

DOI: 10.1038/nature11514

“The first citrate-eaters were just barely able to grow on the citrate, but they got much better over time. We wanted to understand the changes that allowed the bacteria to evolve this new ability. We were lucky to have a system that allowed us to do so.”

Normal E. coli can’t digest citrate when oxygen is present because they don’t express the right protein to absorb citrate molecules.

To decipher the responsible mutations, Blount worked with Richard Lenski, professor of microbiology and molecular genetics.

Lenski’s long-term experiment, cultivating cultures of fast-growing E. coli, was launched in 1988 and has allowed him and his teammates to study more than more than 56,000 generations of bacterial evolution.

The experiment demonstrates natural selection at work. And because samples are frozen and available for later study, when something new emerges scientists can go back to earlier generations to look for the steps that happened along the way.

“We first saw the citrate-using bacteria around 33,000 generations,” Lenski explains. “But Zack was able to show that some of the important mutations had already occurred before then by replaying evolution from different intermediate stages. He showed you could re-evolve the citrate-eaters, but only after some of the other pieces of the puzzle were in place.”

Easy as 1, 2, 3

In the Nature paper, Blount and his teammates analyzed 29 genomes from different generations to find the mutational pieces of the puzzle. They uncovered a three-step process in which the bacteria developed this new ability.

The first stage was potentiation, when the E. coli accumulated at least two mutations that set the stage for later events. The second step, actualization, is when the bacteria first began eating citrate, but only just barely nibbling at it.

The final stage, refinement, involved mutations that greatly improved the initially weak function. This allowed the citrate eaters to wolf down their new food source and to become dominant in the population.

“We were particularly excited about the actualization stage,” Blount says. “The actual mutation involved is quite complex. It re-arranged part of the bacteria’s DNA, making a new regulatory module that had not existed before.

“This new module causes the production of a protein that allows the bacteria to bring citrate into the cell when oxygen is present. That is a new trick for E. coli.”

The change was far from normal, Lenski says.

“It wasn’t a typical mutation at all, where just one base-pair, one letter, in the genome is changed,” he says. “Instead, part of the genome was copied so that two chunks of DNA were stitched together in a new way. One chunk encoded a protein to get citrate into the cell, and the other chunk caused that protein to be expressed.”

Additional co-authors include Jeff Barrick, University of Texas at Austin, and Carla Davidson, University of Calgary.

The research was funded in part by the National Science Foundation.

Source: Michigan State University

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Sep 23, 2012 18:17

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Ryan
Sep 29, 2012 6:43

Hang on, 33,000 generations for one fairly minor mutation… Let’s make an analogy with humans (or homonids); say that there’s a 13 year gap between successive human generations (12 years for females to reach adolescence and 1 year to childbirth), that means 429,000 years for a single minor human evolution. Seems a bit long.

But who knows, maybe vegans, who can thrive eating grass, are the next stage in human evolution.

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