Institute of Ecology and Evolution, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, United Kingdom.
Department for Evolutionary Genetics, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology, Plön, Germany.
PLoS Biol. 2024 Sep 26;22(9):e3002795. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3002795. eCollection 2024 Sep.
Each generation, spontaneous mutations introduce heritable changes that tend to reduce fitness in populations of highly adapted living organisms. This erosion of fitness is countered by natural selection, which keeps deleterious mutations at low frequencies and ultimately removes most of them from the population. The classical way of studying the impact of spontaneous mutations is via mutation accumulation (MA) experiments, where lines of small effective population size are bred for many generations in conditions where natural selection is largely removed. Such experiments in microbes, invertebrates, and plants have generally demonstrated that fitness decays as a result of MA. However, the phenotypic consequences of MA in vertebrates are largely unknown, because no replicated MA experiment has previously been carried out. This gap in our knowledge is relevant for human populations, where societal changes have reduced the strength of natural selection, potentially allowing deleterious mutations to accumulate. Here, we study the impact of spontaneous MA on the mean and genetic variation for quantitative and fitness-related traits in the house mouse using the MA experimental design, with a cryopreserved control to account for environmental influences. We show that variation for morphological and life history traits accumulates at a sufficiently high rate to maintain genetic variation and selection response. Weight and tail length measures decrease significantly between 0.04% and 0.3% per generation with narrow confidence intervals. Fitness proxy measures (litter size and surviving offspring) decrease on average by about 0.2% per generation, but with confidence intervals overlapping zero. When extrapolated to humans, our results imply that the rate of fitness loss should not be of concern in the foreseeable future.
每一代,自发突变都会引入遗传变化,这些变化往往会降低高度适应的生物种群的适应性。这种适应性的侵蚀被自然选择所抵消,自然选择使有害突变保持在低频率,并最终将它们从种群中大部分去除。研究自发突变影响的经典方法是通过突变积累(MA)实验,在这些实验中,小有效种群大小的系在自然选择基本消除的条件下繁殖了许多代。在微生物、无脊椎动物和植物中的此类实验通常表明,MA 导致适应性下降。然而,MA 在脊椎动物中的表型后果在很大程度上是未知的,因为以前没有进行过重复的 MA 实验。我们对人类种群的了解存在这一差距,在人类种群中,社会变革降低了自然选择的力度,可能导致有害突变的积累。在这里,我们使用 MA 实验设计研究自发 MA 对家鼠数量和与适应性相关的性状的平均值和遗传变异的影响,使用冷冻保存的对照来解释环境影响。我们表明,形态和生活史特征的变异以足够高的速率积累,以保持遗传变异和选择反应。体重和尾巴长度测量值在每代 0.04%到 0.3%之间以狭窄的置信区间显著下降。适应度代理测量值(窝仔数和存活后代)平均每代下降约 0.2%,但置信区间与零重叠。将这些结果外推到人类身上,我们的结果表明,在可预见的未来,适应度损失的速度不应令人担忧。