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  6. R2d2 Drives Selfish Sweeps in the House Mouse

R2d2 Drives Selfish Sweeps in the House Mouse

File(s)
R2d2_Drives_Selfish_Sweeps_in_the_House_Mouse.pdf (953.97 KB)
Permanent Link(s)
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/60438
Collections
EEB Papers - Jeremy Searle
Author
Didion, John P.
Morgan, Andrew P.
Yadgary, Liran
Bell, Timothy A.
McMullan, Rachel C.
Ortiz de Solorzano, Lydia
Britton-Davidian, Janice
Bult, Carol J.
Campbell, Karl J.
Castiglia, Riccardo
Ching, Yung-Hao
Chunco, Amanda J.
Crowley, James J.
Chesler, Elissa J.
Förster, Daniel W.
French, John E.
Gabriel, Sofia I.
Gatti, Daniel M.
Garland, Theodore
Giagia-Athanasopoulou, Eva B.
Giménez, Mabel D.
Grize, Sofia A.
Gündüz, ?slam
Holmes, Andrew
Hauffe, Heidi C.
Herman, Jeremy S.
Holt, James M.
Hua, Kunjie
Jolley, Wesley J.
Lindholm, Anna K.
López-Fuster, María J.
Mitsainas, George
da Luz Mathias, Maria
McMillan, Leonard
da Graça Morgado Ramalhinho, Maria
Rehermann, Barbara
Rosshart, Stephan P.
Searle, J. B.
Shiao, Meng-Shin
Solano, Emanuela
Svenson, Karen L.
Thomas-Laemont, Patricia
Threadgill, David W.
Ventura, Jacint
Weinstock, George M.
Pomp, Daniel
Churchill, Gary A.
Pardo-Manuel de Villena, Fernando
Abstract

A selective sweep is the result of strong positive selection driving newly occurring or standing genetic variants to fixation, and can dramatically alter the pattern and distribution of allelic diversity in a population. Population-level sequencing data have enabled discoveries of selective sweeps associated with genes involved in recent adaptations in many species. In contrast, much debate but little evidence addresses whether “selfish” genes are capable of fixation—thereby leaving signatures identical to classical selective sweeps—despite being neutral or deleterious to organismal fitness. We previously described R2d2, a large copy-number variant that causes nonrandom segregation of mouse Chromosome 2 in females due to meiotic drive. Here we show population-genetic data consistent with a selfish sweep driven by alleles of R2d2 with high copy number (R2d2HC) in natural populations. We replicate this finding in multiple closed breeding populations from six outbred backgrounds segregating for R2d2 alleles. We find that R2d2HC rapidly increases in frequency, and in most cases becomes fixed in significantly fewer generations than can be explained by genetic drift. R2d2HC is also associated with significantly reduced litter sizes in heterozygous mothers, making it a true selfish allele. Our data provide direct evidence of populations actively undergoing selfish sweeps, and demonstrate that meiotic drive can rapidly alter the genomic landscape in favor of mutations with neutral or even negative effects on overall Darwinian fitness. Further study will reveal the incidence of selfish sweeps, and will elucidate the relative contributions of selfish genes, adaptation and genetic drift to evolution.

Sponsorship
This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health T32GM067553 to J.P.D. and A.P.M., F30MH103925 to A.P.M., P50GM076468 to E.J.C., G.A.C., and F.P.M.V., K01MH094406 to J.J.C., DK-076050 and DK-056350 to D.P., AG038070 to G.A.C, and the intramural research program to B.R. and S.P.R.; National Science Foundation IOS-1121273 to T.G.; Vaadia-BARD Postdoctoral Fellowship Award FI-478-13 to L.Y.; U.S. Army Medical Research and Materiel Command W81XWH-11-1-0762 to C.J.B.; The Jackson Laboratory new investigator funds to E.J.C.; The National Center for Scientific Research, France to J.B.D. (this is contribution n°ISEM 2016-002); the University of Rome “La Sapienza” to R.C. and E.S.; Claraz-Stiftung to S.G. and A.L.; Natural Environment Research Council (UK) to M.D.G., H.C.H., and J.B.S.; EU Human Capital and Mobility Programme (CHRX-CT93-0192) to H.C.H. and J.B.S.; Foundation for Science and Technology, Portugal PTDC/BIA-EVF/116884/2010 and UID/AMB/50017/2013 to S.I.G., M.L.M., and J.B.S.; Spanish “Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnología” CGL2007-62111 and “Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad” CGL2010-15243 to J.V.; and the Oliver Smithies Investigator funds provided by the School of Medicine at University of North Carolina to F.P.M.V.
Date Issued
2016-02-15
Publisher
Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution
Keywords
R2d2
•
Meiotic Drive
•
Selfish Genes
•
Selective Sweep
•
House Mouse
Related DOI
https://doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msw036
Previously Published as
Molecular Biology and Evolution (2016), 33(6):1381–1395
Type
article

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