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Genetic load

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Genetic load is the difference between the fitness of an average genotype in a population and the fitness of some reference genotype, which may be either the best present in a population, or may be the theoretically optimal genotype. The average individual taken from a population with a low genetic load will generally, when grown in the same conditions, have more surviving offspring than the average individual from a population with a high genetic load.[1][2] Genetic load can also be seen as reduced fitness at the population level compared to what the population would have if all individuals had the reference high-fitness genotype.[3] High genetic load may put a population in danger of extinction.

Fundamentals

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Consider n genotypes , which have the fitnesses and frequencies , respectively. Ignoring frequency-dependent selection, the genetic load may be calculated as:

where is either some theoretical optimum, or the maximum fitness observed in the population. In calculating the genetic load, must be actually found in at least a single copy in the population, and is the average fitness calculated as the mean of all the fitnesses weighted by their corresponding frequencies:

where the genotype is and has the fitness and frequency and respectively.

One problem with calculating genetic load is that it is difficult to evaluate either the theoretically optimal genotype, or the maximally fit genotype actually present in the population.[4] This is not a problem within mathematical models of genetic load, or for empirical studies that compare the relative value of genetic load in one setting to genetic load in another.

Causes

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Deleterious mutation

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Deleterious mutation load is the main contributing factor to genetic load overall.[5] The Haldane-Muller theorem of mutation–selection balance says that the load depends only on the deleterious mutation rate and not on the selection coefficient.[6] Specifically, relative to an ideal genotype of fitness 1, the mean population fitness is where U is the total deleterious mutation rate summed over many independent sites. The intuition for the lack of dependence on the selection coefficient is that while a mutation with stronger effects does more harm per generation, its harm is felt for fewer generations.

A slightly deleterious mutation may not stay in mutation–selection balance but may instead become fixed by genetic drift when its selection coefficient is less than one divided by the effective population size.[7] In asexual populations, the stochastic accumulation of mutation load is called Muller's ratchet, and occurs in the absence of beneficial mutations, when after the most-fit genotype has been lost, it cannot be regained by genetic recombination. Deterministic accumulation of mutation load occurs in asexuals when the deleterious mutation rate exceeds one per replication.[8] Sexually reproducing species are expected to have lower genetic loads.[9] This is one hypothesis for the evolutionary advantage of sexual reproduction. Purging of deleterious mutations in sexual populations is facilitated by synergistic epistasis among deleterious mutations.[10]

High load can lead to a small population size, which in turn increases the accumulation of mutation load, culminating in extinction via mutational meltdown.[11][12]

The accumulation of deleterious mutations in humans has been of concern to many geneticists, including Hermann Joseph Muller,[13] James F. Crow,[10] Alexey Kondrashov,[14] W. D. Hamilton,[15] and Michael Lynch.[16]

Beneficial mutation

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In sufficiently genetically loaded populations, new beneficial mutations create fitter genotypes than those previously present in the population. When load is calculated as the difference between the fittest genotype present and the average, this creates a substitutional load. The difference between the theoretical maximum (which may not actually be present) and the average is known as the "lag load".[17] Motoo Kimura's original argument for the neutral theory of molecular evolution was that if most differences between species were adaptive, this would exceed the speed limit to adaptation set by the substitutional load.[18] However, Kimura's argument confused the lag load with the substitutional load, using the former when it is the latter that in fact sets the maximal rate of evolution by natural selection.[19]

More recent "travelling wave" models of rapid adaptation derive a term called the "lead" that is equivalent to the substitutional load, and find that it is a critical determinant of the rate of adaptive evolution.[20][21]

Inbreeding

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Inbreeding increases homozygosity. In the short run, an increase in inbreeding increases the probability with which offspring get two copies of a recessive deleterious alleles, lowering fitnesses via inbreeding depression.[22] In a species that habitually inbreeds, e.g. through self-fertilization, a proportion of recessive deleterious alleles can be purged.[23][24]

Likewise, in a small population of humans practicing endogamy, deleterious alleles can either overwhelm the population's gene pool, causing it to become extinct, or alternately, make it fitter.[25]

Recombination/segregation

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Combinations of alleles that have evolved to work well together may not work when recombined with a different suite of coevolved alleles, leading to outbreeding depression. Segregation load occurs in the presence of overdominance, i.e. when heterozygotes are more fit than either homozygote. In such a case, the heterozygous genotype gets broken down by Mendelian segregation, resulting in the production of homozygous offspring. Therefore, there is segregation load as not all individuals have the theoretical optimum genotype. Recombination load arises through unfavorable combinations across multiple loci that appear when favorable linkage disequilibria are broken down.[26] Recombination load can also arise by combining deleterious alleles subject to synergistic epistasis, i.e. whose damage in combination is greater than that predicted from considering them in isolation.[27]

Migration

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Migration load is hypothesized to occur when maladapted non-native organisms enter a new environment.[28]

On one hand, beneficial genes from migrants can increase the fitness of local populations.[29] On the other hand, migration may reduce the fitness of local populations by introducing maladptive alleles. This is hypothesized to occur when the migration rate is "much greater" than the selection coefficient.[29]

Migration load may occur by reducing the fitness of local organisms, or through natural selection imposed on the newcomers, such as by being eliminated by local predators.[30][31] Most studies have only found evidence for this theory in the form of selection against immigrant populations, however, one study found evidence for increased mutational burden in recipient populations, as well.[32]

References

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  1. ^ Whitlock, Michael C.; Bourguet, Denis (2000). "Factors affecting the genetic load in Drosophila: synergistic epistasis and correlations among fitness components" (PDF). Evolution. 54 (5): 1654–1660. doi:10.1554/0014-3820(2000)054[1654:FATGLI]2.0.CO;2. PMID 11108592. S2CID 44511613.
  2. ^ Crist, Kathryn Carvey; Farrar, Donald R. (1983). "Genetic load and long-distance dispersal in Asplenium platyneuron". Canadian Journal of Botany. 61 (6): 1809–1814. doi:10.1139/b83-190.
  3. ^ JF Crow (1958). "Some possibilities for measuring selection intensities in man". Human Biology. 30 (1): 1–13. PMID 13513111.
  4. ^ Agrawal, Aneil F.; Whitlock, Michael C. (2012). "Mutation load: the fitness of individuals in populations where deleterious alleles are abundant". Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics. 43 (1): 115–135. doi:10.1146/annurev-ecolsys-110411-160257.
  5. ^ Klekowski, EdwardJ. (1988). "Genetic load and its causes in long-lived plants". Trees. 2 (4): 195–203. doi:10.1007/BF00202374. S2CID 24058154.
  6. ^ Bürger, Reinhard (1998). "Mathematical properties of mutation-selection models". Genetica. 102/103: 279–298. doi:10.1023/a:1017043111100. S2CID 22885529.
  7. ^ Lande, Russell (October 1994). "Risk of Population Extinction from Fixation of New Deleterious Mutations". Evolution. 48 (5): 1460–1469. doi:10.2307/2410240. JSTOR 2410240. PMID 28568413.
  8. ^ Kondrashov, A. S. (1988). "Deleterious mutations and the evolution of sexual reproduction". Nature. 336 (6198): 435–440. Bibcode:1988Natur.336..435K. doi:10.1038/336435a0. PMID 3057385. S2CID 4233528.
  9. ^ Marriage, Tara N. (2009). Mutation, asexual reproduction and genetic load: A study in three parts (Ph.D. thesis). University of Kansas.
  10. ^ a b Crow, James F. (5 August 1997). "The high spontaneous mutation rate: Is it a health risk?". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 94 (16): 8380–8386. Bibcode:1997PNAS...94.8380C. doi:10.1073/pnas.94.16.8380. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 33757. PMID 9237985.
  11. ^ Lynch, Michael; Conery, John; Burger, Reinhard (December 1995). "Mutational Meltdowns in Sexual Populations". Evolution. 49 (6): 1067–1080. doi:10.2307/2410432. JSTOR 2410432. PMID 28568521.
  12. ^ Lynch, Michael; Conery, John; Burger, Reinhard (1 January 1995). "Mutation Accumulation and the Extinction of Small Populations". The American Naturalist. 146 (4): 489–518. doi:10.1086/285812. JSTOR 2462976. S2CID 14762497.
  13. ^ Muller, H. J. (1 June 1950). "Our load of mutations". American Journal of Human Genetics. 2 (2): 111–176. ISSN 0002-9297. PMC 1716299. PMID 14771033.
  14. ^ Kondrashov, Alexey S. (21 August 1995). "Contamination of the genome by very slightly deleterious mutations: why have we not died 100 times over?". Journal of Theoretical Biology. 175 (4): 583–594. Bibcode:1995JThBi.175..583K. doi:10.1006/jtbi.1995.0167. PMID 7475094.
  15. ^ Hamilton, W.D. Narrow Roads of Gene Land vol. 2: Evolution of Sex. pp. 449–463.
  16. ^ Lynch, M. (7 March 2016). "Mutation and Human Exceptionalism: Our Future Genetic Load". Genetics. 202 (3): 869–875. doi:10.1534/genetics.115.180471. PMC 4788123. PMID 26953265.
  17. ^ Smith, J. Maynard (1 January 1976). "What Determines the Rate of Evolution?". The American Naturalist. 110 (973): 331–338. doi:10.1086/283071. JSTOR 2459757. S2CID 85575105.
  18. ^ Kimura, Motoo (1968). "Evolutionary rate at the molecular level" (PDF). Nature. 217 (5129): 624–626. Bibcode:1968Natur.217..624K. doi:10.1038/217624a0. PMID 5637732. S2CID 4161261.
  19. ^ Ewens, Warren J. (2003). Mathematical population genetics (2nd ed.). New York: Springer. p. 78. ISBN 978-0387201917.
  20. ^ Desai, M. M.; Fisher, D. S. (4 May 2007). "Beneficial Mutation Selection Balance and the Effect of Linkage on Positive Selection". Genetics. 176 (3): 1759–1798. doi:10.1534/genetics.106.067678. PMC 1931526. PMID 17483432.
  21. ^ Bertram, J; Gomez, K; Masel, J (February 2017). "Predicting patterns of long-term adaptation and extinction with population genetics". Evolution. 71 (2): 204–214. arXiv:1605.08717. doi:10.1111/evo.13116. PMID 27868195. S2CID 4705439.
  22. ^ Saccheri, I. J.; Lloyd, H. D.; Helyar, S. J.; Brakefield, P. M. (2005). "Inbreeding uncovers fundamental differences in the genetic load affecting male and female fertility in a butterfly". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 272 (1558): 39–46. doi:10.1098/rspb.2004.2903. PMC 1634945. PMID 15875568.
  23. ^ Byers, D. L.; Waller, D. M. (1999). "Do plant populations purge their genetic load? Effects of population size and mating history on inbreeding depression". Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics. 30 (1): 479–513. doi:10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.30.1.479.
  24. ^ Barrett, S. C. H.; Charlesworth, D. (1991). "Effects of a change in the level of inbreeding on the genetic load". Nature. 352 (6335): 522–524. Bibcode:1991Natur.352..522B. doi:10.1038/352522a0. PMID 1865906. S2CID 4240051.
  25. ^ Pala, M.; Zappala, Z.; Marongiu, M. (2017). "Population and individual-specific regulatory variation in Sardinia". Nature Genetics. 49 (5): 700–707. doi:10.1038/ng.3840. PMC 5411016. PMID 28394350. S2CID 4240051.
  26. ^ Haag, C. R.; Roze, D. (2007). "Genetic load in sexual and asexual diploids: segregation, dominance and genetic drift". Genetics. 176 (3): 1663–1678. doi:10.1534/genetics.107.073080. PMC 1931546. PMID 17483409.
  27. ^ King, J. (1966). "The gene interaction component of the genetic load". Genetics. 53 (3): 403–413. doi:10.1093/genetics/53.3.403. PMC 1211027. PMID 5919323.
  28. ^ Bolnick, Daniel I. (2007). "Natural selection in populations subject to a migration load". Evolution. 61 (9): 2229–2243. doi:10.1111/j.1558-5646.2007.00179.x. PMID 17767592. S2CID 25685919.
  29. ^ a b Hu, Xin-Sheng; Li, Bailian (2003). "On migration load of seeds and pollen grains in a local population". Heredity. 90 (2): 162–168. doi:10.1038/sj.hdy.6800212. PMID 12634823. "Gene flow can homogenize the genetic divergence among populations. On the one hand, effects of genetic drift in small local populations can be effectively reduced when the average number of migrants is greater than one (Wright, 1969), beneficial immigrant genes can shift local populations to a higher fitness peak (Barton and Whitlock, 1997). On the other hand, gene flow between populations adapted to different environments can cause maladaptation in a recipient population, resulting in migration load, a reduction in population fitness. If the migration rate is much greater than the selection coefficient, migrant alleles can even swamp out locally adaptive alleles (Wright, 1969)."
  30. ^ Bolnick 2007: "A second consequence of migration–selection balance is known as “migration load” (Garcia-Ramos and Kirkpatrick 1997). This is the loss in mean fitness of a population that results from immigration of locally maladapted alleles. Migration load is analogous to the “mutation load” that arises when mutation inputs new alleles that, on average, are expected to be less fit than existing alleles. Although both migration and mutation have the potential to import locally beneficial novel alleles that promote adaptation (Kawecki 2000), immigrants from other environments may frequently carry alleles that are less fit in the local habitat. Consequently, in addition to constraining divergence among populations, migration displaces recipient populations from their local adaptive peaks. For Mendelian traits, this entails a reduction in the frequency of locally favored alleles that otherwise would be at or near fixation, whereas quantitative traits may be displaced from the mean value favored by selection."
  31. ^ Bolnick 2007:"Given this life history, the homogenizing effects of migration are expected to be most obvious early in a generation, after which natural selection by visual predators presumably eliminates many immigrants."
  32. ^ Bolnick 2007: To date, support for migration load has generally been confined to studies of individual populations, in which selection operates against immigrants (King 1992; Sandoval 1994a; Hendry et al. 2002; Moore and Hendry 2005).