Reducing Epistasis and Pleiotropy Can Avoid the Survival of the Flattest Tragedy

Biology (Basel). 2024 Mar 17;13(3):193. doi: 10.3390/biology13030193.

Abstract

This study investigates whether reducing epistasis and pleiotropy enhances mutational robustness in evolutionary adaptation, utilizing an indirect encoded model within the "survival of the flattest" (SoF) fitness landscape. By simulating genetic variations and their phenotypic consequences, we explore organisms' adaptive mechanisms to maintain positions on higher, narrower evolutionary peaks amidst environmental and genetic pressures. Our results reveal that organisms can indeed sustain their advantageous positions by minimizing the complexity of genetic interactions-specifically, by reducing the levels of epistasis and pleiotropy. This finding suggests a counterintuitive strategy for evolutionary stability: simpler genetic architectures, characterized by fewer gene interactions and multifunctional genes, confer a survival advantage by enhancing mutational robustness. This study contributes to our understanding of the genetic underpinnings of adaptability and robustness, challenging traditional views that equate complexity with fitness in dynamic environments.

Keywords: epistasis; mutational robustness; pleiotropy; survival of the flattest.

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding.