| Literature DB >> 28971958 |
Camille Gervais1,2, Denis Roze3,2.
Abstract
Different factors can influence the evolution of the mutation rate of a species: costs associated with DNA replication fidelity, indirect selection caused by the mutations produced (that should generally favor lower mutation rates, given that most mutations affecting fitness are deleterious), and genetic drift, which may render selection acting on weak mutators inefficient. In this paper, we use a two-locus model to compute the strength of indirect selection acting on a modifier locus that affects the mutation rate toward a deleterious allele at a second, linked, locus, in a population undergoing partial selfing or partial clonality. The results show that uniparental reproduction increases the effect of indirect selection for lower mutation rates. Extrapolating to the case of a whole genome with many deleterious alleles, and introducing a direct cost to DNA replication fidelity, the results can be used to compute the evolutionarily stable mutation rate, U In the absence of mutational bias toward higher U, the analytical prediction fits well with individual-based, multilocus simulation results. When such a bias is added into the simulations, however, genetic drift may lead to the maintenance of higher mutation rates, and this effect may be amplified in highly selfing or highly clonal populations due to their reduced effective population size.Entities:
Keywords: clonality; deleterious mutation; modifier model; multilocus population genetics; self-fertilization
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28971958 PMCID: PMC5714466 DOI: 10.1534/genetics.117.300346
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genetics ISSN: 0016-6731 Impact factor: 4.562