Surviving evolutionary escape on complex genotype-phenotype networks

Author

Ibanez-Marcelo, E.

Alarcon, T.

Publication date

2016-01-01



Abstract

We study the problem of evolutionary escape and survival of cell populations with a genotype–phenotype structure. We refer to evolutionary escape as the process where a cell of a given ill-adapted population to reach a well-adapted phenotype. Similarly, survival refers to the dynamics of the population once the escape phenotype has been reached. The aim of this paper is to analyse the influence of topological properties associated to robustness and evolvability on the probability of escape and on the probability of survival. In order to explore these issues, we formulate a population dynamics model, consisting of a multi-type time-continuous branching process, where types are associated to genotypes and their birth and death probabilities depend on the associated phenotype (non-escape or escape). We exploit the separation of time scales introduced by the the difference in reproductive ratios between the ill-adapted phenotypes and the escape phenotype. Two dynamical regimes emerge: a fast-decaying regime associated to the escape process itself, and a slow regime which corresponds to the survival dynamics of the population once the escape phenotype has been reached. We exploit this separation of time scales to analyse the topological factors which determine escape and survival probabilities. We show that, while the escape probability depends on the degree of escape phenotype, the probability of survival is essentially determined by its robustness, measured in terms of a weighted clustering coefficient.

Document Type

Article
Published version

Language

English

CDU Subject

51 - Mathematics

Subject

Matemàtiques

Pages

25 p.

Version of

Journal of Mathematical Biology

Documents

Alarcon16MaRcAt.pdf

1.510Mb

 

Rights

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