5–31 May 2008
<a href="http://www.nordita.se/">NORDITA</a>
Europe/Stockholm timezone

Dynamics of microbial evolution

13 May 2008, 10:00
1h
<a href="http://www.nordita.se/">NORDITA</a>

<a href="http://www.nordita.se/">NORDITA</a>

Roslagstullsbacken 23 SE-10691 Stockholm Sweden

Speaker

Prof. Joachim Krug (U Cologne)

Description

Abstract: Experimental evolution is an emerging field of evolutionary biology in which populations of microbes (bacteria, viruses, fungi) are propagated in the lab for thousands of generations and adaptive events are monitored in phenotypic and genotypic detail. In this talk I will review recent efforts at modeling such experiments, based on the classic Wright-Fisher model of population genetics. The talk will focus in particular on the phenomenon of clonal interference, the competition between different beneficial mutations that is believed to slow down the adaptation of asexual populations and hence to contribute to the evolutionary advantage of sex [1].
  1. S.C. Park, J. Krug, PNAS 104, 18135 (2007)

Primary author

Prof. Joachim Krug (U Cologne)

Presentation materials