| Literature DB >> 29246191 |
Gina L Conte1,2, Kathryn A Hodgins3,4, Sam Yeaman3,5, Jon C Degner3, Sally N Aitken3, Loren H Rieseberg6, Michael C Whitlock7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mutation load is expected to be reduced in hybrids via complementation of deleterious alleles. While local adaptation of hybrids confounds phenotypic tests for reduced mutation load, it may be possible to assess variation in load by analyzing the distribution of putatively deleterious alleles. Here, we use this approach in the interior spruce (Picea glauca x P. engelmannii) hybrid complex, a group likely to suffer from high mutation load and in which hybrids exhibit local adaptation to intermediate conditions. We used PROVEAN to bioinformatically predict whether non-synonymous alleles are deleterious, based on conservation of the position and abnormality of the amino acid change.Entities:
Keywords: Complementation; Conifers; Deleterious mutations; Hybridization; Mutation load; Population genomics; Spruce
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29246191 PMCID: PMC5731209 DOI: 10.1186/s12864-017-4344-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Fig. 1Sample collection locations. Seed was collected from the 249 locations indicated across British Columbia and Alberta, Canada. The average ancestry proportion of individuals in a given collection location is indicated by point color which ranges from blue, representing pure white spruce, to red, representing pure Engelmann spruce. Background colors show predicted species ranges (based on climatic niche model) of white spruce (blue), Engelmann spruce (red) and hybrids (purple). Niche envelopes were generated by Tongli Wang (unpubl.) with methodology as described in Wang et al. [57]. All maps were generated by JD, and produced using ESRI ArcGIS 10.2.2. No copyright permissions were required
Fig. 2Folded site frequency spectrum. Synonymous minor alleles are shown in grey, nonsynonymous non-deleterious minor alleles are shown in green and nonsynonymous deleterious minor alleles are shown in orange
Fig. 3Effect of deleterious alleles on a fitness proxy. Quadratic regression of the proportion of ancestry from Engelmann spruce on total biomass (a) and linear regressions of those residuals on the proportion of alleles at polymorphic loci predicted to be deleterious (b) and the proportion of polymorphic loci predicted to be homozygous deleterious (c). The proportion of ancestry from Engelmann is represented by a color gradient with warm colors indicating a high proportion and cool colors indicating a low proportion
Fig. 4Prevalence of non-deleterious and deleterious minor alleles per individual by ancestry proportion. The proportion of ancestry from Engelmann spruce is shown against the proportion of alleles at polymorphic loci that are non-deleterious minor alleles (a) the proportion of alleles at polymorphic loci that are deleterious minor alleles (b), the ratio of the proportion of alleles at polymorphic loci that are deleterious minor alleles to the proportion of alleles at polymorphic loci that are non-deleterious minor alleles (c), the proportion of polymorphic loci that are homozygous for a non-deleterious minor allele (d), the proportion of polymorphic loci that are homozygous for a deleterious minor allele (e) and the ratio of the proportion of polymorphic loci that are homozygous for a deleterious minor allele to the proportion of polymorphic loci that are homozygous for a non-deleterious minor allele (f). Lines in in (a) - (c) represent linear regressions and those in (d) - (f) represent quadratic regressions. Vertical colored bars represent 95% confidence intervals for the mean of each species groups (blue for pure white spruce, red for pure Engelmann spruce and purple for intermediate hybrid) and columns of the corresponding background colors indicate the range of individuals included in each species group. Note difference in Y-axis scale among panels, especially for deleterious and non-deleterious alleles