RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Diminishing returns of inoculum size on the rate of a plant RNA virus evolution JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 226357 DO 10.1101/226357 A1 Rebeca Navarro A1 Silvia Ambrós A1 Fernando Martínez A1 Santiago F. Elena YR 2017 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/11/28/226357.abstract AB Understanding how genetic drift, mutation and selection interplay in determining the evolutionary fate of populations is one of the central questions of Evolutionary Biology. Theory predicts that by increasing the number of coexisting beneficial alleles in a population beyond some point does not necessarily translates into an acceleration in the rate of evolution. This diminishing-returns effect of beneficial genetic variability in microbial asexual populations is known as clonal interference. Clonal interference has been shown to operate in experimental populations of animal RNA viruses replicating in cell cultures. Here we carried out experiments to test whether a similar diminishing-returns of population size on the rate of adaptation exists for a plant RNA virus infecting real multicellular hosts. We have performed evolution experiments with tobacco etch potyvirus in two hosts, the natural and a novel one, at different inoculation sizes and estimated the rates of evolution for two phenotypic fitness-related traits. Firstly, we found that evolution proceeds faster in the novel than in the original host. Secondly, we found the predicted diminishing-returns effect of inoculum size on the rate of evolution for one of the fitness traits, but not for the other, which suggests that selection operates differently on each trait.