Life's Speed Limit

Mutation is the engine of evolution: organisms would not be able to evolve new characteristics if their DNA did not randomly acquire small...

Mutation is the engine of evolution: organisms would not be able to evolve new characteristics if their DNA did not randomly acquire small changes. But mutations can also be dangerous. If too many life-threatening mutations appear too quickly, an entire species could face extinction. Now a group of Harvard scientists has calculated the number of mutations that can appear in any organism’s genome in each generation without threatening a population’s survival. And because this “speed limit” on genetic change arises from fundamental properties of molecules, the limit is the same for the simplest viruses and the most complex plants and animals.

The study, which appeared recently in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, links two lines of scientific research: the detailed investigation of the physical properties of proteins, and the broader study of evolutionary change. DNA serves as a template for building proteins, which are the primary actors in the cells of organisms. Professor of chemistry and chemical biology Eugene Shakhnovich, the study’s lead author, says that a great deal is known about the three-dimensional properties of proteins and how their shape affects their function. “The next step,” he explains, “is to understand how the proteins’ shape affects the behavior of organisms,” including their survival and evolution.

His team, led by research associate Konstantin Zeldovich, focused on a key property of proteins: their stability. Some mutations in DNA affect the way proteins fold into three-dimensional structures. Critical proteins must be structurally stable for an individual organism to survive; on a population level, if too many individuals die out because their proteins are unstable, a species risks extinction.

To find the limit on mutations per genome per generation, the team modeled a range of possible stabilities for proteins essential to life. Employing a diffusion equation, widely used in physics, they calculated the balance point at which too many proteins become unstable for a population to survive. The answer they came up with: six mutations per generation.

Shakhnovich notes that this absolute speed limit illustrates why organisms that have very large genomes, such as mammals, must mutate very slowly: it is far more difficult to ensure that fewer than six mutations occur in a genome with billions of potential mutation sites than in one with several thousand. In fact, he says, most organisms operate far below the theoretical speed limit because they have developed elaborate error-correction systems to ensure that mutations occur only rarely.

Some diseases, on the other hand, thrive by operating near the fundamental limit of mutation. Viruses, and particularly RNA viruses like HIV, have relatively high mutation rates; only by changing their proteins constantly can they evade their host’s immune system. Certain bacteria speed their evolution by shutting down their error-correction systems. Cancer cells grow and spread by mutating more quickly than normal cells.

The six-mutation rule has real-world applications. Certain therapies already take advantage of such limits by drastically boosting mutation rates in order to kill their targets: radiation therapy to treat cancer, for example. At the same time, the low mutation rate that allows complex organisms to support large, stable genomes limits their ability to adapt quickly in response to new conditions, as a virus or bacterium would. Global warming, for instance, may pose a particular threat to those species that evolve slowly—and Shakhnovich’s team is trying to understand in more detail how the need to maintain a stable genome affects the speed at which organisms can adapt to environmental change.

~Courtney Humphries

Read more articles by Courtney Humphries
Related topics

You might also like

Five Questions with Andrew Knoll

A paleontologist on how to understand Earth’s biggest extinction event

Harvard Professor Michael Sandel Wins Philosophy’s Berggruen Prize

The creator of the popular ‘Justice’ course receives a $1 million award.

Harvard Economist Wolfram Schlenker Is Tackling Climate Change

How extreme heat affects our land—and our food supply 

Most popular

Harvard Announces Four University Professors

Catherine Dulac, Noah Feldman, Claudia Goldin, and Cumrun Vafa receive the University’s highest faculty distinction.

What Trump Means for John Roberts’s Legacy

Executive power is on the docket at the Supreme Court.

Harvard’s Class of 2029 Reflects Shifts in Racial Makeup After Affirmative Action Ends

International students continue to enroll amid political uncertainty; mandatory SATs lead to a drop in applications.

Explore More From Current Issue

Aisha Muharrar with shoulder-length hair, wearing a green blazer and white shirt.

Parks and Rec Comedy Writer Aisha Muharrar Gets Serious about Grief

With Loved One, the Harvard grad and Lampoon veteran makes her debut as a novelist.

Professor David Liu smiles while sitting at a desk with colorful lanterns and a figurine in the background.

This Harvard Scientist Is Changing the Future of Genetic Diseases

David Liu has pioneered breakthroughs in gene editing, creating new therapies that may lead to cures.

A vibrant composition of flowers, a bird, and butterflies with a distant manor under a moody sky.

Rachel Ruysch’s Lush (Still) Life

Now on display at the Museum of Fine Arts, a Dutch painter’s art proved a treasure trove for scientists.