The advantage of sex in evolving yeast populations
- 31 July 1997
- journal article
- letter
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 388 (6641) , 465-468
- https://doi.org/10.1038/41312
Abstract
Sex is a general feature of the life cycle of eukaryotes. It is not universal, however, as many organisms seem to lack sex entirely1. The widespread occurrence of sex is puzzling, both because meiotic recombination can disrupt co-adapted combinations of genes, and because it halves the potential rate of reproduction in organisms with strongly differentiated male and female gametes2. Most attempts to explain the maintenance of sexuality invoke differences between parents and sexual offspring. These differences may be advantageous in novel or changing environments if new gene combinations are favoured from time to time1. Sex would then serve to concentrate beneficial mutations that have arisen independently into the same line of descent. But in a stable environment sex might serve to concentrate deleterious mutations, so that they will be more effectively purged from the population by selection3. We have studied the effect of sex on mean fitness in experimental populations of the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Our results show that sex increases mean fitness in an environment to which the populations were well adapted, but not in an environment to which new adaptation occurred, supporting the hypothesis that the advantage of sexuality lay in the removal of deleterious mutations.Keywords
This publication has 11 references indexed in Scilit:
- The relation of recombination to mutational advancePublished by Elsevier ,2003
- The effect of sex and deleterious mutations on fitness in ChlamydomonasProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 1996
- Significant competitive advantage conferred by meiosis and syngamy in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1996
- Transposition of the yeast retroviruslike element Ty3 is dependent on the cell cycle.Molecular and Cellular Biology, 1994
- A ruby in the rubbish: beneficial mutations, deleterious mutations and the evolution of sex.Genetics, 1994
- Positive and negative regulatory elements control expression of the yeast retrotransposon Ty3.Genetics, 1993
- Mutation accumulation in finite outbreeding and inbreeding populationsGenetics Research, 1993
- [8] Putting the HO gene to work: Practical uses for mating-type switchingPublished by Elsevier ,1991
- Deleterious mutations and the evolution of sexual reproductionNature, 1988
- The effect of suppressing crossing-over on the response to selection inDrosophila melanogasterGenetics Research, 1970