A PDE Model for Protocell Evolution and the Origin of Chromosomes via Multilevel Selection
Daniel B. Cooney, Fernando W. Rossine, Dylan H. Morris, and Simon A., Levin

TL;DR
This paper develops a PDE-based model to explore how protocells evolved complex genomes through multilevel selection, highlighting the role of gene interactions like dimerization in promoting coexistence.
Contribution
It introduces a minimal PDE model for protocell evolution, demonstrating how gene interactions such as dimer formation can facilitate coexistence under multilevel selection.
Findings
Fast gene advantage hinders coexistence without gene interaction.
Dimer replicators promote coexistence of fast and slow genes.
Numerical evidence supports coexistence in trimorphic competition.
Abstract
The evolution of complex cellular life involved two major transitions: the encapsulation of self-replicating genetic entities into cellular units and the aggregation of individual genes into a collectively replicating genome. In this paper, we formulate a minimal model of the evolution of proto-chromosomes within protocells. We model a simple protocell composed of two types of genes: a "fast gene" with an advantage for gene-level self-replication and a "slow gene" that replicates more slowly at the gene level, but which confers an advantage for protocell-level reproduction. Protocell-level replication capacity depends on cellular composition of fast and slow genes. We use a partial differential equation to describe how the composition of genes within protocells evolves over time under within-cell and between-cell competition. We find that the gene-level advantage of fast replicators…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOrigins and Evolution of Life · Evolution and Genetic Dynamics · Evolutionary Game Theory and Cooperation
