A 58,000-generation experiment catches evolution in the act
(chosen for Oct 26 discussion)
30 years ago, Richard Lenski started an evolution experiment that is still running today. The Long-Term Evolution Experiment, or LTEE, began in 1988 when Lenski started 12 lines of E. coli with a single clonal cell in each. By maintaining these lines under identical conditions for tens of thousands of generations and freezing still-viable samples of each line every 500 generations, Lenski created the ability to examine the repeatability of evolution and to replay evolution from any 500-generation time-point in the past. And when one line evolved a novel resource-use phenotype approximately 30,000 generations later, Lenski and colleagues were able to leverage this ingeniously simple design, using genome sequencing to reveal the genetic origin of the novel phenotype — and shedding new light on the importance of historical contingency in adaptive evolution.
Additional reading:
The first paper reporting the novel phenotype
A bit of model-fitting at the 60K-gen. mark suggests there may not be an upper limit to adaptation in a constant environment
A much earlier paper describing the design of the LTEE in detail
Lenski's LTEE website with more papers, data, news, and info for the lay public
An AmNat meeting talk by Lenski about where the LTEE is now, 65K gens. later
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