Multivariate Phenotypic Divergence Due to the Fixation of Beneficial Mutations in Experimentally Evolved Lineages of a Filamentous Fungus
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Abstract
The potential for evolutionary change is limited by the availability of genetic variation. Mutations are the ultimate source of
new alleles, yet there have been few experimental investigations of the role of novel mutations in multivariate phenotypic
evolution. Here, we evaluated the degree of multivariate phenotypic divergence observed in a long-term evolution
experiment whereby replicate lineages of the filamentous fungus Aspergillus nidulans were derived from a single genotype
and allowed to fix novel (beneficial) mutations while maintained at two different population sizes. We asked three
fundamental questions regarding phenotypic divergence following approximately 800 generations of adaptation: (1)
whether divergence was limited by mutational supply, (2) whether divergence proceeded in relatively many (few)
multivariate directions, and (3) to what degree phenotypic divergence scaled with changes in fitness (i.e. adaptation). We
found no evidence that mutational supply limited phenotypic divergence. Divergence also occurred in all possible
phenotypic directions, implying that pleiotropy was either weak or sufficiently variable among new mutations so as not to
constrain the direction of multivariate evolution. The degree of total phenotypic divergence from the common ancestor was
positively correlated with the extent of adaptation. These results are discussed in the context of the evolution of complex
phenotypes through the input of adaptive mutations.
