Begin forwarded message:

Date: January 24, 2012 7:16:42 PM EST
To: Bart Hazes <bha...@ualberta.ca<mailto:bha...@ualberta.ca>>
Subject: Re: [ccp4bb] quasispecies

This remark brings to mind a paper published recently by Ariel Fernandez and 
Mike Lynch:

Nature 474:502, 2011:  Non-adaptive Origins of Interactome Complexity

The point, if I understand it correctly, is that when population sizes are 
small, as they are in multicellular eukaryotes, the effect of "drift" becomes 
more significant, and mutations to the surfaces of proteins that impair the 
protein surface - solvent interaction are established more easily in the 
population. A consequence suggested by the authors is that these "surface 
defects" provide an enhanced manifold from which to recruit novel 
surface-surface contacts that lead to an increase in the interactome".

Charlie

On Jan 24, 2012, at 4:31 PM, Bart Hazes wrote:

To some extend I feel that this is always the case but for "normal" organisms 
the sampling rate of fitness space is slow and genetic differences between 
individuals are dominated by mutations passed down by vertical descend. In 
contrast, if you sequence two viruses from the above two infections there 
genetic distance will be similar to the genetic distances between individuals 
within a single infection.


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