scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

On the accumulation of deleterious mutations during range expansions

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this paper, the authors investigate the effect of spatial range expansions on the evolution of fitness when beneficial and deleterious mutations cosegregate, and they find that the expansion load can persist and represent a major fraction of the total mutation load for thousands of generations after the expansion.
Abstract
We investigate the effect of spatial range expansions on the evolution of fitness when beneficial and deleterious mutations cosegregate. We perform individual-based simulations of 1D and 2D range expansions and complement them with analytical approximations for the evolution of mean fitness at the edge of the expansion. We find that deleterious mutations accumulate steadily on the wave front during range expansions, thus creating an expansion load. Reduced fitness due to the expansion load is not restricted to the wave front, but occurs over a large proportion of newly colonized habitats. The expansion load can persist and represent a major fraction of the total mutation load for thousands of generations after the expansion. The phenomenon of expansion load may explain growing evidence that populations that have recently expanded, including humans, show an excess of deleterious mutations. To test the predictions of our model, we analyse functional genetic diversity in humans and find patterns that are consistent with our model.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Understanding Inbreeding Depression, Purging, and Genetic Rescue

TL;DR: In natural populations, purging and genetic rescue mitigate fitness decline during inbreeding periods, and might be critical to population survival, thus, both mechanisms should be considered when assessing extinction risks.
Journal ArticleDOI

What we still don't know about invasion genetics.

TL;DR: The potential for studies of invasion genetics to reveal the limits to evolution and to stimulate the development of practical strategies to either minimize or maximize evolutionary responses to environmental change is discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bottlenecks and selective sweeps during domestication have increased deleterious genetic variation in dogs

TL;DR: These results provide the first quantitative estimates of the increased burden of deleterious variants directly associated with domestication and have important implications for selective breeding programs and the conservation of rare and endangered species.
Journal ArticleDOI

Estimating the mutation load in human genomes.

TL;DR: The pattern of deleterious alleles as ascertained in genome sequencing data sets is reviewed and whether human populations differ in their predicted burden of deleters — a phenomenon known as mutation load.
Journal ArticleDOI

Distance from sub-Saharan Africa predicts mutational load in diverse human genomes.

TL;DR: It is concluded that many predicted deleterious mutations have evolved as if they were neutral during the expansion out of Africa, but that OOA populations are likely to have a higher mutation load due to increased allele frequencies of nearly neutral variants that are recessive or partially recessive.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

A method and server for predicting damaging missense mutations.

TL;DR: A new method and the corresponding software tool, PolyPhen-2, which is different from the early tool polyPhen1 in the set of predictive features, alignment pipeline, and the method of classification is presented and performance, as presented by its receiver operating characteristic curves, was consistently superior.
Journal ArticleDOI

A globally coherent fingerprint of climate change impacts across natural systems

TL;DR: A diagnostic fingerprint of temporal and spatial ‘sign-switching’ responses uniquely predicted by twentieth century climate trends is defined and generates ‘very high confidence’ (as laid down by the IPCC) that climate change is already affecting living systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ecological responses to recent climate change.

TL;DR: A review of the ecological impacts of recent climate change exposes a coherent pattern of ecological change across systems, from polar terrestrial to tropical marine environments.
Journal ArticleDOI

An integrated map of genetic variation from 1,092 human genomes

TL;DR: It is shown that evolutionary conservation and coding consequence are key determinants of the strength of purifying selection, that rare-variant load varies substantially across biological pathways, and that each individual contains hundreds of rare non-coding variants at conserved sites, such as motif-disrupting changes in transcription-factor-binding sites.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ecological and Evolutionary Responses to Recent Climate Change

TL;DR: Range-restricted species, particularly polar and mountaintop species, show severe range contractions and have been the first groups in which entire species have gone extinct due to recent climate change.
Related Papers (5)