“…Genomic changes promoting adaptation to new substrates have included mutations that enhance the kinetics of enzymes acting on the substrate (Fong et al, 2005a, b;Herring et al, 2006;Conrad et al, 2009;Lee and Palsson, 2010) and mutations in promoter regions and global regulatory elements (Treves et al, 1998;Herring et al, 2006;Pelosi et al, 2006); as well as RNA polymerases (Herring et al, 2006;Conrad et al, 2010). Surprisingly, there have been fewer reports of adaptation to the use of a new substrate via mutations in known transcriptional regulators (Philippe et al, 2007;Barrick et al, 2009) despite the fact that changes in transcriptional regulators are thought to have key roles in the evolution of new microbial species (Dekel and Alon, 2005;Babu and Aravind, 2006;Babu et al, 2007), a concept further supported with the observation that transcriptional regulatory networks evolve and change faster than other collaborative biological networks such as protein interaction networks and metabolic pathway networks (Shou et al, 2011).…”