Evolutionary Rewriting: How Horizontal Gene Transfer Challenges the Modern Synthesis
The traditional narrative of evolutionary biology, largely codified during the mid-20th century, is known as the Modern Synthesis. This framework synthesized Mendelian genetics with Darwinian natural selection, positing that the primary mechanism for evolutionary change is the gradual accumulation of small, beneficial mutations within a lineage. In this view, inheritance is strictly vertically passed from parent to offspring and the tree of life is a branching structure where species divergence is the inevitable result of reproductive isolation. However, the study of microbial evolution, particularly the role of horizontal gene transfer (HGT) mediated by mobile genetic elements (MGEs), has emerged as a disruptive force that challenges the fundamental assumptions of this synthesis. At its core, the Modern Synthesis relies on the concept of the gene as a stable unit of heredity, subject to mutation and recombination within the confines of a sexual population. For microbes which reproduce...