The Black Queen Hypothesis: Evolution of Dependencies through Adaptive Gene Loss
Michigan State University · University of Tennessee at Knoxville
Abstract
Reductive genomic evolution, driven by genetic drift, is common in endosymbiotic bacteria. Genome reduction is less common in free-living organisms, but it has occurred in the numerically dominant open-ocean bacterioplankton Prochlorococcus and "Candidatus Pelagibacter," and in these cases the reduction appears to be driven by natural selection rather than drift. Gene loss in free-living organisms may leave them dependent on cooccurring microbes for lost metabolic functions. We present the Black Queen Hypothesis (BQH), a novel theory of reductive evolution that explains how selection leads to such dependencies; its name refers to the queen of spades in the game Hearts, where the usual strategy is to avoid…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 29.84
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 60
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Natural selection
- Organism
- Gene
- Function (biology)
- Genetics
- Negative selection
- Evolutionary biology
- Life below water