Evolutionary transitions in controls reconcile adaptation with continuity of evolution

Seminars in Cell & Developmental Biology
Alexander V Badyaev

Abstract

Evolution proceeds by accumulating functional solutions, necessarily forming an uninterrupted lineage from past solutions of ancestors to the current design of extant forms. At the population level, this process requires an organismal architecture in which the maintenance of local adaptation does not preclude the ability to innovate in the same traits and their continuous evolution. Representing complex traits as networks enables us to visualize a fundamental principle that resolves tension between adaptation and continuous evolution: phenotypic states encompassing adaptations traverse the continuous multi-layered landscape of past physical, developmental and functional associations among traits. The key concept that captures such traversing is network controllability - the ability to move a network from one state into another while maintaining its functionality (reflecting evolvability) and to efficiently propagate information or products through the network within a phenotypic state (maintaining its robustness). Here I suggest that transitions in network controllability - specifically in the topology of controls - help to explain how robustness and evolvability are balanced during evolution. I will focus on evolutionary trans...Continue Reading

Citations

Apr 10, 2019·Nature Communications·Alexander V BadyaevDawn M Higginson
Feb 2, 2021·Molecular Ecology·Eva K FischerKim L Hoke

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