Analytical Theory of Scaling Laws for Probabilistic Genotype-Phenotype Map Robustness
ORAL
Abstract
Recent studies of genotype-phenotype (GP) maps have reported universally enhanced phenotypic robustness to genotype mutations, a feature essential to evolution. Virtually all of these studies make a simplifying assumption that each genotype—represented as a sequence—maps deterministically to a single phenotype, such as a discrete structure. We have introduced probabilistic genotype-phenotype (PrGP) maps, where each genotype maps to a vector of phenotype probabilities, as a more realistic and universal language for investigating robustness in a variety of physical, biological, and computational systems. We study three model systems to show that PrGP maps offer a generalized framework which can handle uncertainty emerging from various physical sources: (1) thermal fluctuation in RNA folding, (2) external field disorder in spin glass ground state finding, and (3) superposition and entanglement in quantum circuits, which are realized experimentally on IBM quantum computers. In all three cases, we observe a novel biphasic robustness scaling which is enhanced relative to random expectation for more frequent phenotypes and approaches random expectation for less frequent phenotypes. Here, we present an analytical theory for the behavior of PrGP robustness, and we demonstrate that the theory is highly predictive of empirical robustness. In an accompanying poster, we detail the computational systems mentioned above.
*This work was supported by awards T32GM007753 and T32GM144273 from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, a Hertz Foundation Fellowship (to Vaibhav Mohanty - VM), and a PD Soros Fellowship (to VM). The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, the National Institutes of Health, IBM, or the IBM Quantum Team. The authors declare no known conflict of interest.
–
Publication: Under review at Physical Review Letters: https://arxiv.org/abs/2301.01847
Presenters
-
Vaibhav Mohanty
- Harvard University/MIT
- Harvard University and MIT