Amorim Carlos Eduardo G, Di Chenlu, Lin Meixi, Marsden Clare, Del Carpio Christina A, Mah Jonathan C, Robinson Jacqueline, Kim Bernard Y, Mooney Jazlyn A, Cornejo Omar E, Lohmueller Kirk E
Biology Department, California State University, Northridge, California, 91330, USA.
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Los Angeles, California, 90095, USA.
bioRxiv. 2024 Nov 14:2024.11.13.623529. doi: 10.1101/2024.11.13.623529.
The domestication of wild canids led to dogs no longer living in the wild but instead residing alongside humans. Extreme changes in behavior and diet associated with domestication may have led to the relaxation of the selective pressure on traits that may be less important in the domesticated context. Thus, here we hypothesize that strongly deleterious mutations may have become less deleterious in domesticated populations. We test this hypothesis by estimating the distribution of fitness effects (DFE) for new amino acid changing mutations using whole-genome sequence data from 24 gray wolves and 61 breed dogs. We find that the DFE is strikingly similar across canids, with 26-28% of new amino acid changing mutations being neutral/nearly neutral (| < 1e-5), and 41-48% under strong purifying selection (| > 1e-2). Our results are robust to different model assumptions suggesting that the DFE is stable across short evolutionary timescales, even in the face of putative drastic changes in the selective pressure caused by artificial selection during domestication and breed formation. On par with previous works describing DFE evolution, our data indicate that the DFE of amino acid changing mutations depends more strongly on genome structure and organismal characteristics, and less so on shifting selective pressures or environmental factors. Given the constant DFE and previous data showing that genetic variants that differentiate wolf and dog populations are enriched in regulatory elements, we speculate that domestication may have had a larger impact on regulatory variation than on amino acid changing mutations.
野生犬科动物的驯化使得狗不再生活在野外,而是与人类生活在一起。与驯化相关的行为和饮食的极端变化可能导致对在驯化环境中可能不太重要的性状的选择压力放松。因此,我们在此假设,在驯化种群中,强烈有害的突变可能变得不那么有害。我们使用来自24只灰狼和61只家犬的全基因组序列数据,通过估计新的氨基酸变化突变的适合度效应分布(DFE)来检验这一假设。我们发现,犬科动物的DFE惊人地相似,26%-28%的新氨基酸变化突变是中性/近中性的(| < 1e-5),41%-48%处于强烈的纯化选择之下(| > 1e-2)。我们的结果对于不同的模型假设是稳健的,这表明DFE在短进化时间尺度上是稳定的,即使面对驯化和品种形成过程中人工选择导致的假定的剧烈选择压力变化。与之前描述DFE进化的研究一致,我们的数据表明,氨基酸变化突变的DFE更多地取决于基因组结构和生物特征,而较少取决于变化的选择压力或环境因素。鉴于DFE的恒定以及先前的数据表明区分狼和狗种群的遗传变异在调控元件中富集,我们推测驯化对调控变异的影响可能比对氨基酸变化突变的影响更大。