PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

No peak in sight for evolving bacteria

2013-11-15
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Layne Cameron
Layne.cameron@cabs.msu.edu
517-353-8819
Michigan State University
No peak in sight for evolving bacteria There's no peak in sight – fitness peak, that is – for the bacteria in Richard Lenski's Michigan State University lab.

Lenski, MSU Hannah Distinguished Professor of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, has been running his evolutionary bacteria experiment for 25 years, generating more than 50,000 generations. In a paper published in the current issue of Science, Michael Wiser, lead author and MSU graduate student in Lenski's lab, compares it to hiking.

"When hiking, it's easy to start climbing toward what seems to be a peak, only to discover that the real peak is far off in the distance," Wiser said. "Now imagine you've been climbing for 25 years, and you're still nowhere near the peak."

Only the peaks aren't mountains. They are what biologists call fitness peaks – when a population finds just the right set of mutations, so it can't get any better. Any new mutation that comes along will send things downhill.

The bacteria in Lenski's lab are still becoming more fit even after a quarter century, living in the same, simple environment.

Biologists have known that organisms keep evolving if the environment keeps changing, but they've previously thought that adaptation would eventually grind to a halt if the environment stayed constant for a long time.

Wiser pulled hundreds of samples from the deep freezer that contains a frozen fossil record – bacteria all the way back to generation 0 in Lenski's 25-year experiment. And these fossils, unlike dinosaurs, are alive. So they can be competed against samples from different generations to measure the trajectory – the path – of the bacteria as they climbed for 50,000 generations toward the fitness peaks.

"There doesn't seem to be any end in sight," Lenski said. "We used to think the bacteria's fitness was leveling off, but now we see it's slowing down but not really leveling off."

Wiser found that the trajectories matched a type of mathematical function called a power law. Although the slope of the power-law function gets less and less steep over time, it never reaches a peak.

Noah Ribeck, co-author and MSU postdoctoral researcher, built a model using a few well-understood principles.

"It was surprising to me that a simple theory can describe the entirety of a long evolutionary trajectory that includes initially fast and furious adaptation that later slowed to a crawl," Ribeck said. "It's encouraging that despite all the complications inherent to biological systems, they are governed by general principles that can be described quantitatively."

When will it end?

"I call this the experiment that keeps on giving," Lenski said. "Even after 25 years, it's still generating new and exciting discoveries. From the models, we can predict how things will evolve – how fit the bacteria will become – if future generations of scientists continue the experiment long after I'm gone."

Lenski hopes that an endowment could be secured to keep the experiment going forever, he added.

### Lenski's research is supported in part by the National Science Foundation. Wiser, Ribeck and Lenski are also participants in the NSF-funded MSU BEACON Center for the Study of Evolution in Action.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Pediatric ICU nurse staffing models with more experience and education cut inpatient mortality

2013-11-15
Pediatric ICU nurse staffing models with more experience and education cut inpatient mortality Multi-institutional study recommends cut point for clinical experience in pediatric ICUs Boston, Mass. - Nursing leaders from 38 children's hospitals, ...

JAMA Dermatology: Social media brings academic journals to general readers

2013-11-15
JAMA Dermatology: Social media brings academic journals to general readers A University of Colorado Cancer Center study recently published in the Journal of the American Medical Association: Dermatology shows that a handful of academic journals have successfully ...

Understanding a protein's role in familial Alzheimer's disease

2013-11-15
Understanding a protein's role in familial Alzheimer's disease Novel genomic approach reveals gene mutation isn't simple answer Researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine have used genetic engineering of human induced pluripotent ...

Mass. General study identifies genes uniquely expressed by the brain's immune cells

2013-11-15
Mass. General study identifies genes uniquely expressed by the brain's immune cells Identifying 'sensome' of microglia could improve understanding, treatments for neurodegenerative disorders Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) investigators have used ...

Evolution can select for evolvability, Penn biologists find

2013-11-15
Evolution can select for evolvability, Penn biologists find Evolution does not operate with a goal in mind; it does not have foresight. But organisms that have a greater capacity to evolve may fare better in rapidly changing environments. This raises ...

New technique for developing drugs to treat serious illnesses

2013-11-15
New technique for developing drugs to treat serious illnesses Researchers exploit the power of evolution to create designer proteins An international team of researchers led by the University of Leicester has "harnessed the power of evolution" to create a ...

Enrollment in SNAP does not substantially improve food security or dietary quality

2013-11-15
Enrollment in SNAP does not substantially improve food security or dietary quality According to a new study in the Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior Philadelphia, PA, November 15, 2013 – Millions of families in the United States struggle to provide ...

Treatment of pelvic nodes individualized by inclusion of sentinel nodes is feasible with IMRT, says

2013-11-15
Treatment of pelvic nodes individualized by inclusion of sentinel nodes is feasible with IMRT, says Arnhem, The Netherlands- Treatment of pelvic nodes individualized by inclusion of sentinel nodes (SN) can be easily integrated into an IMRT-based ...

Exercise training is effective as 'prehabilitation' before surgery in an elderly population

2013-11-15
Exercise training is effective as 'prehabilitation' before surgery in an elderly population Arnhem, The Netherlands – Cardiopulmonary Exercise Testing (CPET) assessment and exercise training in an elderly population is safe and well tolerated, according ...

Multicenter study underscored the need of a uniform approach to the treatment of BCa

2013-11-15
Multicenter study underscored the need of a uniform approach to the treatment of BCa Arnhem, The Netherlands - New study, involving eight Italian research centres, concluded that an aligned approach to the treatment of advanced bladder cancer is ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

AAI appoints Anand Balasubramani as Chief Scientific Programs Officer

Prior authorization may hinder access to lifesaving heart failure medications

Scholars propose transparency, credit and accountability as key principles in scientific authorship guidelines

Jeonbuk National University researchers develop DDINet for accurate and scalable drug-drug interaction prediction

IEEE researchers achieve 20x signal boost in cerebral blood flow monitoring with next-generation interferometric diffusing wave spectroscopy

IEEE researchers achieve low-power ultrashort mid-IR pulse compression

Deep-sea natural compound targets cancer cells through a dual mechanism

Antibiotics can affect the gut microbiome for several years 

Study: Electrical stimulation can restore ability to move limbs, receive sensory feedback after spinal cord injury

Rice scientists unveil new tool to watch quantum behavior in action

Gene-based therapies poised for major upgrade thanks to Oregon State University research

Extreme heat has extreme effects r—but some like it hot

Blood marker for Alzheimer’s may also be useful in heart and kidney diseases

Climate extremes hinder early development in young birds

Climate policies: The swing voters that determine their fate

Building protection against infectious diseases with nanostructured vaccines

Oval orbit casts new light on black hole - neutron star mergers

Does online sports gambling affect substance use behaviors?

How do rapid socio-environmental transitions reshape cancer risk?

Do abortion bans affect birth rates and food-assistance costs?

Can artificial intelligence help reduce the carbon footprint of weather forecasting models?

Mangrove forests are short of breath

Low testosterone, high fructose: A recipe for liver disaster

SKKU research team unravels the origin of stochasticity, a key to next-generation data security and computing

Flexible polymer‑based electronics for human health monitoring: A safety‑level‑oriented review of materials and applications

Could ultrasound help save hedgehogs?

attexis RCT shows clinically relevant reduction in adult ADHD symptoms and is published in Psychological Medicine

Cellular changes linked to depression related fatigue

First degree female relatives’ suicidal intentions may influence women’s suicide risk

Specific gut bacteria species (R inulinivorans) linked to muscle strength

[Press-News.org] No peak in sight for evolving bacteria