Selection for robust metabolism in domesticated yeasts is driven by adaptation to Hsp90 stress.
Natalia CondicHatim AmijiDipak PatelWilliam Charles ShropshireNejla Ozirmak LermiYoussef SabhaBeryl JohnBlake M HansonGeorgios Ioannis KarrasPublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2024)
Protein folding both promotes and constrains adaptive evolution. We uncover this surprising duality in the role of the protein-folding chaperone heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90) in maintaining the integrity of yeast metabolism amid proteotoxic stressors within industrial domestication niches. Ethanol disrupts critical Hsp90-dependent metabolic pathways and exerts strong selective pressure for redundant duplications of key genes within these pathways, yielding the classical genomic signatures of beer and bread domestication. This work demonstrates a mechanism of adaptive canalization in an ecology of major economic importance and highlights Hsp90-dependent variation as an important source of phantom heritability in complex traits.