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Drift Increases the Advantage of Sex in RNA Bacteriophage
6
Art Poona and
Lin Chaoa
a Division of Biology, University of California, San Diego, California 92093
Corresponding author: Art Poon, Muir Biology Bldg., Room 3155, Division of Biology, University of California, San Diego, CA 92093-0116., apoon{at}biomail.ucsd.edu (E-mail)
Communicating editor: H. OCHMAN
6 initiated from a common source population at varying bottleneck sizes. The segmented genome of this virus results in genetic exchange between viruses that co-infect the same host cell. In response to selection for growth in a high-temperature environment, sexual lines outperformed their asexual counterparts on average. The advantage of sex attenuated with increasing effective population size, implying that the rate of adaptation was limited by clonal interference among segments caused by drift. This is the first empirical evidence that the advantage of sex during adaptation increases with the intensity of drift.
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