

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
E-ISSN: 1365-2443|20|11|943-955
ISSN: 1356-9597
Source: GENES TO CELLS, Vol.20, Iss.11, 2015-11, pp. : 943-955
Disclaimer: Any content in publications that violate the sovereignty, the constitution or regulations of the PRC is not accepted or approved by CNPIEC.
Abstract
Distinctive survival strategies, specialized in regulation and in quality control, were observed in thermal adaptive evolution with a laboratory Escherichia coli strain. The two specialists carried a single mutation either within rpoH or upstream of groESL, which led to the activated global regulation by sigma factor 32 or an increased amount of GroEL/ES chaperonins, respectively. Although both specialists succeeded in thermal adaptation, the common winner of the evolution was the specialist in quality control, that is, the strategy of chaperonin‐mediated protein folding. To understand this evolutionary consequence, multilevel analyses of cellular status, for example, transcriptome, protein and growth fitness, were carried out. The specialist in quality control showed less change in transcriptional reorganization responding to temperature increase, which was consistent with the finding of that the two specialists showed the biased expression of molecular chaperones. Such repressed changes in gene expression seemed to be advantageous for long‐term sustainability because a specific increase in chaperonins not only facilitated the folding of essential gene products but also saved cost in gene expression compared with the overall transcriptional increase induced by rpoH regulation. Functional specialization offered two strategies for successful thermal adaptation, whereas the evolutionary advantageous was more at the points of cost‐saving in gene expression and the essentiality in protein folding.
Related content




trans Gene Regulation in Adaptive Evolution: a Genetic Algorithm Model
Journal of Theoretical Biology, Vol. 188, Iss. 2, 1997-09 ,pp. :


Gene Regulation and Quality Control in Murine Polyomavirus Infection
Viruses, Vol. 8, Iss. 10, 2016-10 ,pp. :


By Johnson Deborah A. Thomas Michael A.
Molecular Biology and Evolution, Vol. 24, Iss. 11, 2007-11 ,pp. :