Compensatory evolution and the origins of innovations
Etienne Rajon, Joanna Masel

TL;DR
This paper models how cryptic genetic sequences, through compensatory evolution, can provide significant phenotypic variation and facilitate adaptation even without genetic polymorphism.
Contribution
It introduces a model showing that cryptic sequences can generate phenotypic diversity via compensatory evolution, independent of population polymorphism.
Findings
Cryptic sequences can produce phenotypic variation without genetic diversity.
Compensatory evolution balances effects of cryptic mutations across the genome.
Cryptic sequences may accelerate adaptation and large phenotypic changes.
Abstract
Cryptic genetic sequences have attenuated effects on phenotypes. In the classic view, relaxed selection allows cryptic genetic diversity to build up across individuals in a population, providing alleles that may later contribute to adaptation when co-opted - e.g. following a mutation increasing expression from a low, attenuated baseline. This view is described, for example, by the metaphor of the spread of a population across a neutral network in genotype space. As an alternative view, consider the fact that most phenotypic traits are affected by multiple sequences, including cryptic ones. Even in a strictly clonal population, the co-option of cryptic sequences at different loci may have different phenotypic effects and offer the population multiple adaptive possibilities. Here, we model the evolution of quantitative phenotypic characters encoded by cryptic sequences, and compare the…
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