PATHWAYS TO FUNCTION VIA THE EMERGENCE OF A MECHANICAL SWITCH IN EVOLVABLE MATTER
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Date
2025
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Saudi Digital Library
Abstract
The underlying principles of how sharp switches occur in rugged fitness landscapes, while
integral for understanding evolution of function and adaptation in biological systems, re-
main elusive. Here I use elastic mechanical networks as a platform for probing the physical
principles governing single-mutation transitions between two highly-fit, incompatible func-
tions. The function used is an allosteric coupling of two pairs of source and target nodes
that respond to an input strain in-phase or out-phase with each other. I study the complete
fitness landscapes for ensembles of networks, and find that high-fitness pathways between
these functions nearly always exist. At the largest fitness threshold for viable evolution, the
functional transitions occur via a “jumper” mutation: a single bond addition or deletion that
connects distinct fitness peaks with opposite functions. These mutations can be viewed as
a mechanical switch, which I find can switch between incompatible functions with minimal
perturbation to the system. In some cases, the mere presence of a bond, regardless of stiff-
ness, constrains the deformation mode and determines function. However, bond formation or
breaking is not always necessary: subtle geometric deformations that conserve connectivity
can be sufficient to induce sharp functional transitions. The study of this physical system
suggests that the single mutation function switches often found in biological systems may
be fundamentally mechanical in origin.
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Keywords
function switch, mechanical network, mutation
