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SOME PATTERNS OF MOLECULAR EVOLUTION AND VARIATION

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Title: SOME PATTERNS OF MOLECULAR EVOLUTION AND VARIATION


1
SOME PATTERNS OF MOLECULAREVOLUTION AND
VARIATION
  • 1. Regions of the genome with unusually low
    rates of genetic recombination seem to have low
    levels of within-species DNA sequence
    variability.
  • 2. Species with low levels of genome-wide
    recombination, such as largely self-fertilizing
    plants and animals, also show reduced variability.

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  • 3. The level of adaptation in non-recombining
    genomic regions is often reduced.
  • 4. Repetitive DNA sequences (satellite DNA,
    transposable elements) often accumulate in
    genomic regions with low rates of genetic
    recombination.

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Diversity on the D. melanogaster X
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Comparing within-population diversity of A.
lyrata and total A. thaliana diversity Data of
Stephen Wright and Béatrice Lauga
  • kS/kT
  • petraea 1
  • A. thaliana 0

Roughly twofold reduction in the inbreeder, but
some outbreeding populations also have low
diversity. This suggests importance of historical
processes.
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Drosophila miranda Neo-Sex Chromosomes
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  • A GENERAL FEATURE OF LOW
  • RECOMBINATION REGIONS
  • A lack of recombination among a set of genes
    in a genome or genomic region means that the
    evolutionary fates of mutations at different
    sites are not independent of each other (the
    Hill-Robertson effect).
  • unless advantageous mutations occur so
    seldom that each has had time to become
    predominant before the next appears, they can
    only come to be simultaneously in the same gamete
    by means of recombination
  • (Fisher 1930)

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Present
Fitness
0 . 95
Fitness
1
Fitness
0 . 9
Absent
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  • The effective population size (Ne) of large
    non-recombining portions of the genome is
    substantially reduced by such interference among
    genes subject to selection.
  • This leads to a reduction in the level of neutral
    variability in DNA sequences
  • Loci in low recombination genomic regions are
    more likely to accumulate deleterious mutations,
    and less likely to fix selectively advantageous
    mutations, than in regions with normal or high
    recombination rates.

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POSSIBLE FORCES INVOLVED
  • Hitchhiking by favourable mutations (selective
    sweeps)
  • Hitchhiking by deleterious mutations (background
    selection)
  • Stochastic accumulation of deleterious mutations
    (Mullers ratchet)
  • Mutual interference among weakly selected sites
    (weak selection Hill-Robertson effects)

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  • MUTATION-SELECTION BALANCE
  • Assume a very large population size, so that the
    loci under selection are approximately at
    deterministic equilibrium.
  • Assume a mean number of new deleterious
    mutations per haploid genome per generation of U,
    and a harmonic mean selection coefficient against
    heterozygous mutations of t.
  • The equilibrium mean number of deleterious
    mutations per haploid genome is
  • n U/t

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  • With independent effects on fitness of mutations
    at different loci, the frequencies of gametes
    carrying i deleterious mutations are
    Poisson-distributed with mean n U/t.
  • The frequency of the mutation-free class is
  • f0 exp - n
  • e.g. with n 5, f0 0.007.

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  • Hitchhiking by Favourable Mutations
  • The spread of a favourable mutation in a
    non-recombining genome will drag to fixation any
    (sufficiently weakly selected) mutant alleles
    initially associated with it (a selective sweep).
  • Successive adaptive substitutions on
    non-recombining chromosome can lead to the
    fixation of deleterious mutations at other loci,
    contributing to its degeneration. There is an
    associated loss of variability at neutral sites
    on the chromosome.

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  • For deleterious mutations which are sufficiently
    strongly selected that they are near
    mutation-selection equilibrium in the absence of
    selective sweeps, a succession of S selective
    sweeps changes the expected fitness of a
    population by a factor of at most approximately
  • exp - SU/h
  • where h is the harmonic mean reduction in
    fitness to mutant heterozygotes compared with
    heterozygotes (the dominance coefficient).

18
  • Background Selection
  • A neutral or weakly selected mutation that
    arises in a large non-recombining population has
    a non-zero chance of survival only if it arises
    on a chromosome free of strongly deleterious
    mutations.
  • This accelerates the fixation of weakly
    deleterious mutations, and retards the fixation
    of advantageous mutations.
  • Neutral variability is also reduced.

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  • it will only be the best adapted genotypes
    which can become the ancestors of future
    generations, and the beneficial mutations which
    occur will have only the minutest chance of not
    appearing in types of organisms so inferior to
    some of their competitors, that their offspring
    will certainly be supplanted by those of the
    latter
  • (Fisher 1930)

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  • The net effect of background selection is that
    the effective population size, Ne, is reduced to
    f0Ne (in the absence of recombination). This
    means that the equilibrium level of neutral or
    nearly-neutral within-population variability will
    be reduced accordingly.
  • The chance of fixation of deleterious mutations
    can be greatly increased, and the chance of
    fixation of advantageous mutations reduced, due
    to this reduction in Ne.

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  • This effect can be very large e.g. if f0
    0.007, and Ne 500,000, a deleterious mutation
    with a heterozygous effect on fitness of 10-5 has
    a probability of fixation on the neo-Y of 98 of
    the value for a neutral mutation, whereas the
    probability in the absence of background
    selection is only 3 of the neutral value.
  • Similarly, the rate of fixation of advantageous
    mutations is reduced by a factor of approximately
    f0, unless their selection coefficients are
    larger than those of the deleterious mutations in
    the background (as is required for the selective
    sweep model to work).

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  • Mullers Ratchet
  • This involves the stochastic loss from a finite
    population of the class of chromosomes carrying
    the fewest deleterious mutations. In the absence
    of recombination and back mutation, this class of
    chromosome cannot be restored. The next best
    class then replaces it and is in turn lost, in a
    process of successive irreversible steps.
  • Each click of the ratchet is quickly
    followed by the fixation of one mutation in the
    whole population, unless mutations are strongly
    selected and highly recessive.

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Mutation
Drift
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  • SPEED OF MULLERS RATCHET
  • N U t Time between
    Clicks Mean Fitness
  • Sims.
    Theory (at 5 x105gens)
  • 5 x105 0.04 0.0075 3912 5910 0.38
  • 5 x105 0.015 0.0015 732 1343 0.36
  • 5 x105 0.015 0.0025 4924 7785 0.77

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Weak Selection Hill-Robertson Effects
  • The previous models assume that selection is
    sufficiently strong relative to drift that
    deleterious mutations are mostly held close to
    their equilibrium value for an infinitely large
    population, if recombination is frequent.
  • If selection coefficients against deleterious
    mutations are of the order of 1/ Ne, or less,
    this does not hold, and deleterious variants can
    drift to intermediate frequencies, even with free
    recombination

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Testing Hypotheses
  • Can the various models quantitatively explain the
    general patterns seen in the data?
  • When two or more models produce similar
    predictions about patterns, can we discriminate
    among them?

31
Nucleotide Diversity in Drosophila as a Test-Case
  • This is the problem for which it is easiest to
    make quantitative predictions about expected
    patterns i.e., how should variability in a gene
    relate to its position on a chromosome?
  • In addition, the different models make somewhat
    different predictions about the extent of
    departures of the distribution of variant
    frequencies from those expected in the absence of
    Hill-Robertson effects

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Testing for Departures from Neutrality
  • Various statistical tests for departures from the
    distribution of nucleotide variants expected in a
    population at statistical equilibrium have been
    devised, mostly concerned with detecting an
    excess/deficiency of rare variants.
  • Different types of Hill-Robertson effects, as
    well as other factors such as population size
    changes, have different effects on departures
    from neutral expectation.

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Patterns of Codon Usage Bias
  • The theory suggests that background selection and
    selective sweeps should produce a regional
    pattern of codon usage bias across the genome
    that parallels that for neutral diversity.
  • The data on Drosophila melanogaster contradict
    this codon usage (after correcting for local
    base composition) is reduced only in regions of
    the genome with very low rates of crossing over.

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
  • THEORY Deborah Charlesworth, Isabel Gordo,
    Gabriel Marais, Martin Morgan, Magnus Nordborg
  • DATA Peter Andolfatto, Doris Bachtrog, Carolina
    Bartlomomé, Mark Jensen, Xulio Maside, Soojin Yi
  • MONEY BBSRC, EMBO, NSF, Royal Society
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