» Articles » PMID: 23676768

Patterns of Epistasis Between Beneficial Mutations in an Antibiotic Resistance Gene

Overview
Journal Mol Biol Evol
Specialty Biology
Date 2013 May 17
PMID 23676768
Citations 73
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Understanding epistasis is central to biology. For instance, epistatic interactions determine the topography of the fitness landscape and affect the dynamics and determinism of adaptation. However, few empirical data are available, and comparing results is complicated by confounding variation in the system and the type of mutations used. Here, we take a systematic approach by quantifying epistasis in two sets of four beneficial mutations in the antibiotic resistance enzyme TEM-1 β-lactamase. Mutations in these sets have either large or small effects on cefotaxime resistance when present as single mutations. By quantifying the epistasis and ruggedness in both landscapes, we find two general patterns. First, resistance is maximal for combinations of two mutations in both fitness landscapes and declines when more mutations are added due to abundant sign epistasis and a pattern of diminishing returns with genotype resistance. Second, large-effect mutations interact more strongly than small-effect mutations, suggesting that the effect size of mutations may be an organizing principle in understanding patterns of epistasis. By fitting the data to simple phenotype resistance models, we show that this pattern may be explained by the nonlinear dependence of resistance on enzyme stability and an unknown phenotype when mutations have antagonistically pleiotropic effects. The comparison to a previously published set of mutations in the same gene with a joint benefit further shows that the enzyme's fitness landscape is locally rugged but does contain adaptive pathways that lead to high resistance.

Citing Articles

Real-time monitoring of replication errors' fate reveals the origin and dynamics of spontaneous mutations.

Enrico Bena C, Ollion J, De Paepe M, Ventroux M, Robert L, Elez M Nat Commun. 2024; 15(1):2702.

PMID: 38538613 PMC: 10973407. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-46950-0.


Positive epistasis drives clavulanic acid resistance in double mutant libraries of BlaC β-lactamase.

Radojkovic M, Ubbink M Commun Biol. 2024; 7(1):197.

PMID: 38368480 PMC: 10874438. DOI: 10.1038/s42003-024-05868-5.


Population dynamics of cross-protection against β-lactam antibiotics in droplet microreactors.

Zhao X, Ruelens P, Farr A, de Visser J, Baraban L Front Microbiol. 2024; 14:1294790.

PMID: 38192289 PMC: 10773670. DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2023.1294790.


The Fitness of Beta-Lactamase Mutants Depends Nonlinearly on Resistance Level at Sublethal Antibiotic Concentrations.

Farr A, Pesce D, Das S, Zwart M, de Visser J mBio. 2023; 14(3):e0009823.

PMID: 37129484 PMC: 10294655. DOI: 10.1128/mbio.00098-23.


Genotype-phenotype landscapes for immune-pathogen coevolution.

Moulana A, Dupic T, Phillips A, Desai M Trends Immunol. 2023; 44(5):384-396.

PMID: 37024340 PMC: 10147585. DOI: 10.1016/j.it.2023.03.006.


References
1.
Lehner B . Molecular mechanisms of epistasis within and between genes. Trends Genet. 2011; 27(8):323-31. DOI: 10.1016/j.tig.2011.05.007. View

2.
Trindade S, Sousa A, Xavier K, Dionisio F, Ferreira M, Gordo I . Positive epistasis drives the acquisition of multidrug resistance. PLoS Genet. 2009; 5(7):e1000578. PMC: 2706973. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1000578. View

3.
Lalic J, Elena S . Magnitude and sign epistasis among deleterious mutations in a positive-sense plant RNA virus. Heredity (Edinb). 2012; 109(2):71-7. PMC: 3400743. DOI: 10.1038/hdy.2012.15. View

4.
Nagel A, Joyce P, Wichman H, Miller C . Stickbreaking: a novel fitness landscape model that harbors epistasis and is consistent with commonly observed patterns of adaptive evolution. Genetics. 2011; 190(2):655-67. PMC: 3276637. DOI: 10.1534/genetics.111.132134. View

5.
Blount Z, Barrick J, Davidson C, Lenski R . Genomic analysis of a key innovation in an experimental Escherichia coli population. Nature. 2012; 489(7417):513-8. PMC: 3461117. DOI: 10.1038/nature11514. View