Mutation as a Stress Response and the Regulation of Evolvability
Baylor College of Medicine · Children's Cancer Center
Abstract
Our concept of a stable genome is evolving to one in which genomes are plastic and responsive to environmental changes. Growing evidence shows that a variety of environmental stresses induce genomic instability in bacteria, yeast, and human cancer cells, generating occasional fitter mutants and potentially accelerating adaptive evolution. The emerging molecular mechanisms of stress-induced mutagenesis vary but share telling common components that underscore two common themes. The first is the regulation of mutagenesis in time by cellular stress responses, which promote random mutations specifically when cells are poorly adapted to their environments, i.e., when they are stressed. A second theme is the possible…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 15.61
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 212
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Mutagenesis
- Genome instability
- Biology
- Genetics
- Transposon mutagenesis
- Mutation
- DNA damage
- Evolvability
- Life in Land