This article is available from: http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2148/7/110
[Background] RNA molecules, through their dual appearance as sequence and structure,
represent a suitable model to study evolutionary properties of quasispecies. The essential
ingredient in this model is the differentiation between genotype (molecular sequences which are
affected by mutation) and phenotype (molecular structure, affected by selection). This framework
allows a quantitative analysis of organizational properties of quasispecies as they adapt to different
environments, such as their robustness, the effect of the degeneration of the sequence space, or
the adaptation under different mutation rates and the error threshold associated.
[Results]We describe and analyze the structural properties of molecular quasispecies adapting to
different environments both during the transient time before adaptation takes place and in the
asymptotic state, once optimization has occurred. We observe a minimum in the adaptation time
at values of the mutation rate relatively far from the phenotypic error threshold. Through the
definition of a consensus structure, it is shown that the quasispecies retains relevant structural
information in a distributed fashion even above the error threshold. This structural robustness
depends on the precise shape of the secondary structure used as target of selection. Experimental
results available for natural RNA populations are in qualitative agreement with our observations.
[Conclusion] Adaptation time of molecular quasispecies to a given environment is optimized at
values of the mutation rate well below the phenotypic error threshold. The optimal value results
from a trade-off between diversity generation and fixation of advantageous mutants. The critical
value of the mutation rate is a function not only of the sequence length, but also of the specific
properties of the environment, in this case the selection pressure and the shape of the secondary
structure used as target phenotype. Certain functional motifs of RNA secondary structure that
withstand high mutation rates (as the ubiquitous hairpin motif) might appear early in evolution and
be actually frozen evolutionary accidents.
This research was supported by project FIS2004-06414 of Spanish
MEC.
Peer reviewed