| Literature DB >> 29078308 |
Andrea Benazzo1, Emiliano Trucchi1,2, James A Cahill3, Pierpaolo Maisano Delser4,5,6, Stefano Mona4,5, Matteo Fumagalli7, Lynsey Bunnefeld8,9, Luca Cornetti10, Silvia Ghirotto1, Matteo Girardi11, Lino Ometto12,13, Alex Panziera1, Omar Rota-Stabelli12, Enrico Zanetti1, Alexandros Karamanlidis14, Claudio Groff15, Ladislav Paule16, Leonardo Gentile17, Carles Vilà18, Saverio Vicario19, Luigi Boitani20, Ludovic Orlando21, Silvia Fuselli1, Cristiano Vernesi11, Beth Shapiro3, Paolo Ciucci20, Giorgio Bertorelle22.
Abstract
About 100 km east of Rome, in the central Apennine Mountains, a critically endangered population of ∼50 brown bears live in complete isolation. Mating outside this population is prevented by several 100 km of bear-free territories. We exploited this natural experiment to better understand the gene and genomic consequences of surviving at extremely small population size. We found that brown bear populations in Europe lost connectivity since Neolithic times, when farming communities expanded and forest burning was used for land clearance. In central Italy, this resulted in a 40-fold population decline. The overall genomic impact of this decline included the complete loss of variation in the mitochondrial genome and along long stretches of the nuclear genome. Several private and deleterious amino acid changes were fixed by random drift; predicted effects include energy deficit, muscle weakness, anomalies in cranial and skeletal development, and reduced aggressiveness. Despite this extreme loss of diversity, Apennine bear genomes show nonrandom peaks of high variation, possibly maintained by balancing selection, at genomic regions significantly enriched for genes associated with immune and olfactory systems. Challenging the paradigm of increased extinction risk in small populations, we suggest that random fixation of deleterious alleles (i) can be an important driver of divergence in isolation, (ii) can be tolerated when balancing selection prevents random loss of variation at important genes, and (iii) is followed by or results directly in favorable behavioral changes. Published under the PNAS license.Entities:
Keywords: Neolithic impact; Ursus arctos; balancing selection; genetic drift; genetic load
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29078308 PMCID: PMC5692547 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1707279114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205