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Adaptive introgression in animals: examples and comparison to new mutation and standing variation as sources of adaptive variation.

Philip W. Hedrick
- 01 Sep 2013 - 
- Vol. 22, Iss: 18, pp 4606-4618
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TLDR
The various attributes of these three potential sources of adaptive variation are compared, including balancing selection for multiple alleles for major histocompatibility complex (MHC), S and csd genes, pesticide resistance in mice, black colour in wolves and white colour in coyotes, Neanderthal or Denisovan ancestry in humans, and mimicry genes in Heliconius butterflies are examined.
Abstract
Adaptive genetic variation has been thought to originate primarily from either new mutation or standing variation. Another potential source of adaptive variation is adaptive variants from other (donor) species that are introgressed into the (recipient) species, termed adaptive introgression. Here, the various attributes of these three potential sources of adaptive variation are compared. For example, the rate of adaptive change is generally thought to be faster from standing variation, slower from mutation and potentially intermediate from adaptive introgression. Additionally, the higher initial frequency of adaptive variation from standing variation and lower initial frequency from mutation might result in a higher probability of fixation of the adaptive variants for standing variation. Adaptive variation from introgression might have higher initial frequency than new adaptive mutations but lower than that from standing variation, again making the impact of adaptive introgression variation potentially intermediate. Adaptive introgressive variants might have multiple changes within a gene and affect multiple loci, an advantage also potentially found for adaptive standing variation but not for new adaptive mutants. The processes that might produce a common variant in two taxa, convergence, trans-species polymorphism from incomplete lineage sorting or from balancing selection and adaptive introgression, are also compared. Finally, potential examples of adaptive introgression in animals, including balancing selection for multiple alleles for major histocompatibility complex (MHC), S and csd genes, pesticide resistance in mice, black colour in wolves and white colour in coyotes, Neanderthal or Denisovan ancestry in humans, mimicry genes in Heliconius butterflies, beak traits in Darwin's finches, yellow skin in chickens and non-native ancestry in an endangered native salamander, are examined.

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Genetic rescue to the rescue

TL;DR: Genetic rescue is a tool that can stem biodiversity loss more than has been appreciated, provides population resilience, and will become increasingly useful if integrated with molecular advances in population genomics.
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Hybridization, Introgression, and the Nature of Species Boundaries

TL;DR: The nature of the species boundary is explored, defined as the phenotypes/genes/genome regions that remain differentiated in the face of potential hybridization and introgression, and it is emphasized that species boundaries are semipermeable, with permeability (gene exchange) being a function of genome region.
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Evidence for archaic adaptive introgression in humans

TL;DR: An overview of the statistical methods developed to identify archaic introgressed fragments in the genome sequences of modern humans and to determine whether positive selection has acted on these fragments is provided.
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How reticulated are species

TL;DR: Many groups of closely related species have reticulate phylogenies, showing that some sexual compatibility may exist among them and can affect all parts of the tree of life, not just the recent species at the tips.
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The evolutionary origins of pesticide resistance.

TL;DR: Pesticide resistance provides an interesting case of rapid evolution under strong selective pressures, which can be used to address fundamental questions concerning the evolutionary origins of adaptations to novel conditions, and lessons learnt from pesticide resistance should be applied in the deployment of novel, non‐chemical pest‐control methods.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Butterfly genome reveals promiscuous exchange of mimicry adaptations among species

Kanchon K. Dasmahapatra, +83 more
- 05 Jul 2012 - 
TL;DR: It is inferred that closely related Heliconius species exchange protective colour-pattern genes promiscuously, implying that hybridization has an important role in adaptive radiation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Identifying adaptive genetic divergence among populations from genome scans

TL;DR: A hierarchical‐Bayesian method is developed, implemented via Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC), and its performance is assessed in distinguishing the loci simulated under selection from the neutral loci, finding that both methods can identify loci subject to adaptive selection when the selection coefficient is at least five times the migration rate.
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Soft Sweeps: Molecular Population Genetics of Adaptation From Standing Genetic Variation

TL;DR: This work uses diffusion theory to calculate the probabilities for selective adaptations and finds a large increase in the fixation probability for weak substitutions, if alleles originate from the standing genetic variation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multiple and Ancient Origins of the Domestic Dog

TL;DR: Sequences from both dogs and wolves showed considerable diversity and supported the hypothesis that wolves were the ancestors of dogs, suggesting that dogs originated more than 100,000 years before the present.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genetic Evidence for an East Asian Origin of Domestic Dogs

TL;DR: A larger genetic variation in East Asia than in other regions and the pattern of phylogeographic variation suggest an East Asian origin for the domestic dog, ∼15,000 years ago.
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