| Literature DB >> 24415951 |
Melissa A Wilson Sayres1, Kirk E Lohmueller2, Rasmus Nielsen1.
Abstract
The human Y chromosome exhibits surprisingly low levels of genetic diversity. This could result from neutral processes if the effective population size of males is reduced relative to females due to a higher variance in the number of offspring from males than from females. Alternatively, selection acting on new mutations, and affecting linked neutral sites, could reduce variability on the Y chromosome. Here, using genome-wide analyses of X, Y, autosomal and mitochondrial DNA, in combination with extensive population genetic simulations, we show that low observed Y chromosome variability is not consistent with a purely neutral model. Instead, we show that models of purifying selection are consistent with observed Y diversity. Further, the number of sites estimated to be under purifying selection greatly exceeds the number of Y-linked coding sites, suggesting the importance of the highly repetitive ampliconic regions. While we show that purifying selection removing deleterious mutations can explain the low diversity on the Y chromosome, we cannot exclude the possibility that positive selection acting on beneficial mutations could have also reduced diversity in linked neutral regions, and may have contributed to lowering human Y chromosome diversity. Because the functional significance of the ampliconic regions is poorly understood, our findings should motivate future research in this area.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24415951 PMCID: PMC3886894 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1004064
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Genet ISSN: 1553-7390 Impact factor: 5.917
Figure 1Observed and expected ratios of normalized X/Autosome, Y/Autosome, and mtDNA/Autosome nucleotide diversities.
The expected values under an equal male/female ratio for X/Autosome ratio (0.75) and for Y/Autosome and mtDNA/Autosome (0.25) are plotted for reference. Twice the standard error is plotted for each model, computed from the ratios of 10,000 replicates per chromosome comparison. Expected values were computed from simulations using different demographic histories for Africans and Europeans (Tables 1, S4 and S5), first assuming equal numbers of males and females (N m/N f = 1), then successively skewing the effective number of males relative to females in each population (e.g. N m/N f = 0.75 implies three males for every four females in the population). All chromosomes were normalized for chromosome-specific mutation rates using divergence from chimpanzee.
Observed and mean modeled estimates of neutral diversity.
| Diversity | ||||||
| African | European | |||||
| chr | Observed | Observed | ||||
| π | πFar | Modeled | π | πFar | Modeled | |
| A | 0.0739 | 0.0804 | 0.0733 | 0.0563 | 0.0615 | 0.0561 |
| X | 0.0601 | 0.0723 | 0.0565 | 0.0365 | 0.0459 | 0.0403 |
| Y | 0.0018 | 0.0019 | 0.0223 | 0.0024 | 0.0027 | 0.0100 |
| M | 0.0235 | 0.0235 | 0.0222 | 0.0147 | 0.0147 | 0.0101 |
For Africans, the neutral model is of an expansion from 10,000 individuals to 20,000 individuals 4,000 generations ago. For Europeans the neutral model includes a bottleneck from 10,000 individuals to 1000 individuals 1,500 generations ago, followed by an expansion to 10,000 individuals 1,100 generations ago. Expected values assume the null model of equal numbers of breeding males and females (N m/N f = 1). Diversity is normalized by human-chimpanzee divergence, to correct for different mutation rates for each class of sequence. Diversity is additionally calculated far from genes (100 kb away), except for on the mtDNA, where doing so would eliminate all sequence from analysis.
If the “far from genes” filter were applied to the mtDNA, there would be no sequence left to analyze.
Estimates of N m/N f using X and autosomal genetic diversity far from genes.
| Population | π | π | π |
|
| Africa | 0.0723 | 0.0804 | 0.8993 | 0.3352 |
| Europe | 0.0459 | 0.0615 | 0.7463 | 1.0299 |
Figure 2Estimates of the number of sites affected by purifying selection (L) on chromosome Y.
The maximum likelihood estimates (MLEs) and 95% confidence intervals of the number of sites affected by purifying selection on the Y chromosome are plotted for Africans (red) and Europeans (blue). Assuming no sex-biased demography, the MLE for Africans is 5 Mb (95% CI: 1.36–6 Mb) and for Europeans it is 3 Mb (95% CI: 0.798–6 Mb). Estimates were made assuming an equal sex ratio (N m/N f = 1), and assuming a highly skewed sex ratio (N m/N f = 0.38). Assuming this sex-biased demography, the MLE for Africans is 5 Mb (95% CI: 1.85–6 Mb), and for Europeans it is 2 Mb (95% CI: 0.18–4.2 Mb). The number of ampliconic and coding sites on the Y chromosome are plotted in horizontal dotted lines.