Evolutionary Trade-Offs, Pareto Optimality, and the Geometry of Phenotype Space

Oren Shoval(Weizmann Institute of Science), Hila Sheftel(Weizmann Institute of Science), Guy Shinar(Weizmann Institute of Science), Yuval Hart(Weizmann Institute of Science), Omer Ramote(Weizmann Institute of Science), Avi Mayo(Weizmann Institute of Science), E. Dekel(Weizmann Institute of Science), Kathryn D. Kavanagh(University of Massachusetts Dartmouth), Uri Alon(Weizmann Institute of Science)
Science
April 26, 2012
Cited by 693

Abstract

Biological systems that perform multiple tasks face a fundamental trade-off: A given phenotype cannot be optimal at all tasks. Here we ask how trade-offs affect the range of phenotypes found in nature. Using the Pareto front concept from economics and engineering, we find that best-trade-off phenotypes are weighted averages of archetypes--phenotypes specialized for single tasks. For two tasks, phenotypes fall on the line connecting the two archetypes, which could explain linear trait correlations, allometric relationships, as well as bacterial gene-expression patterns. For three tasks, phenotypes fall within a triangle in phenotype space, whose vertices are the archetypes, as evident in morphological studies, including on Darwin's finches. Tasks can be inferred from measured phenotypes based on the behavior of organisms nearest the archetypes.


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