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- Title
Just how Lamarckian is CRISPR-Cas immunity: the continuum of evolvability mechanisms.
- Authors
Koonin, Eugene V.; Wolf, Yuri I.
- Abstract
The CRISPR-Cas system of prokaryotic adaptive immunity displays features of a mechanism for directional, Lamarckian evolution. Indeed, this system modifies a specific locus in a bacterial or archaeal genome by inserting a piece of foreign DNA into a CRISPR array which results in acquired, heritable resistance to the cognate selfish element. A key element of the Lamarckian scheme is the specificity and directionality of the mutational process whereby an environmental cue causes only mutations that provide specific adaptations to the original challenge. In the case of adaptive immunity, the specificity of mutations is equivalent to self-nonself discrimination. Recent studies on the CRISPR mechanism have shown that the levels of discrimination can substantially differ such that in some CRISPR-Cas variants incorporation of DNA is random whereas discrimination occurs by selection of cells that carry cognate inserts. In other systems, a higher level of specificity appears to be achieved via specialized mechanisms. These findings emphasize the continuity between random and directed mutations and the critical importance of evolved mechanisms that govern the mutational process.
- Subjects
IMMUNITY; LAMARCKIANISM; BACTERIAL loci; GENOMES; BACTERIAL DNA; GENETIC mutation
- Publication
Biology Direct, 2016, Vol 11, p1
- ISSN
1745-6150
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1186/s13062-016-0111-z