Events

The KLI support international groups of scholars in the life and sustainability sciences working on interdisciplinary projects to conduct their groundbreaking research at the institute.  KLI Focus Groups and Working Groups aim to develop ideas on a particular subject and generate suggestions for action. The participants have different scientific backgrounds and strive to develop specific, practical goals.  Focus Groups are one-time meetings gathering and working together at the KLI for a period of one to maximum two weeks. Working Groups comprise 3 meetings over the course of one year and a half.

Event Details

Christine Mayer
KLI Colloquia
Evolvability and Robustness – A Paradox in Evolutionary Theory
Christine SYROWATKA (University of Oslo & KLI)
2018-10-23 15:00 - 2018-10-23 16:30
KLI
Organized by KLI

Topic description / abstract:

Evolvability is the ability of a system or population to respond to selection by producing heritable and selectable phenotypic variation. In contrast robustness is the ability of a phenotype to persist against perturbations. Hence, a system cannot be evolvable and robust at the same time. However, evolvability and robustness are both important properties to evolve complex traits. This creates a paradox for the evolution of complex phenotypes. It is assumed that properties of embryological development are playing an important role in determining how genetic variation translates into phenotypic variation and thus affecting the relationship between evolvability and robustness. By investigating the structure of the genotype-phenotype map, we can enhance our knowledge about evolvability and how it shapes evolutionary processes. I am using different types of mathematical models of the genotype-phenotype map to explore different aspects that affect the relationship between evolvability and robustness. I am demonstrating that the relationship between evolvability and robustness depends on the topology of the genotype-phenotype map using the concept of a Boolean genotype-phenotype map. I am challenging this argument using an evolutionary model of a genotype-phenotype map that is motivated by the development of butterfly eyespots. The underlying genetic architecture is a modified pattern-formation model that describes the formation of eyespots on the wings in B. anynana. We investigate the quantitative morphological change of the eyespot under selection to study the relationship between evolvability and robustness.

 

Biographical note:

Christine Syrowatka is a PhD fellow in Thomas Hansen’s lab at the University of Oslo. Her research addresses open questions in evolutionary developmental biology using mathematical and statistical methods and models. In particular, she is investigating the paradoxical relationship between evolvability and robustness by developing models of the genotype-phenotype map and studying it in different contexts. She is now finishing her PhD at the KLI.